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Barbara H.

Rosenwein
CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS

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Copyright 2006 by Cornell University
TO TOM, AS ALWAYS
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Rosenwein, Barbara H.
Emotional communities in the early Middle Ages I Barbara H.
Rosenwein.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN-I3: 978-o-8oi4-4478-4 (cloth: alk. paper)
ISBN-I3: 978-o-80I4-74I6-3 (pbk. : alk. paper)
r. Emotions-History. 2. Social history-Medieval, 500-1500.
I. Title.
BF53r.R68 2006
I52.4094'0902I -dC22
200600I767

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/
This warrior irascibility ofyours;
when it has come back home) what is it like
with your wife) children) and slaves?
Do you think that ifs useful there) too?
CICERO, Tusculan Disputations
CONTENTS

List of Tables and Map x


Prefatory Note xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xvii
Introduction I

I. The Ancient Legacy 32

2. Confronting Death 57
3 Passions and Power 79
4 The Poet and the Bishop wo
s. Courtly Discipline 130

6. Reveling in Rancor 163

Conclusion 191
Selected Bibliography 205

Index 221
TABLES AND MAP PREFATORY NOTE

TABLES I have regularized the use of i!j and ujv in accordance with
r. The Stoic Emotional Grid 39 the rules given by H. A. Kelly, "Uniformity and Sense in Editing and
2. Cicero's List of Stoic Emotions and Approximate English Equivalents 4-0
Citing Medieval Texts;' inMedievalAcademy News (Spring 2004-), p. 8:
I use the i and u for the vowel sound and j and v for the consonant sound.
3 Partial Latin Emotion Word List and Approximate English Equivalents 52
However, I have not regularized other orthography, so that when quoting
4-. Emotion Words at Trier and Clermont Compared 70 from a source that "misspells" a word, I give the word in its original form,
5 Emotion Words in Vienne Inscriptions 74- without either emendation or the cautionary sic. Nor have I changed the
punctuation of the editions that I have used, however dubious they may be.
6. Emotion Words in Non-Episcopal Vienne Inscriptions 76
All translations are my own unless otherwise noted, but I have consulted-
7. The Merovingians 104-
and acknowledge with gratitude-the various translations that have been
made of many of the sources used herein.
MAP

The Early Medieval West 58


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I am grateful to Damien Boquet, Monique Bourin, Michel Bourin, Karl


Brunner, Nancy Gauthier, Mayke de Jong, Daniela Romagnoli, Robert E.
Rosenwein, Julia M. H. Smith, Daniel Smail, and my Loyola colleagues
Leslie Dossey, Allen Frantzen, and Theresa Gross-Diaz for illuminating dis-
cussions. I offer special thanks to Tom Rosenwein and Esther Cohen, both of
whom, in effect, suggested I write this book. Riccardo Cristiani, Albrecht
Diem, and Piroska Nagy were nearly constant e-mail companions.
John Ackerman, Damien Boquet, Riccardo Cristiani, Mayke de Jong,
Maureen C. Miller, Alexander C. Murray, Piroska Nagy, Tom Rosenwein,
Julia Smith, and Ian Wood generously read the first draft and offered extraor-
dinarily helpful comments and suggestions. Graham Robert Edwards and
Danuta Shanzer gave illuminating advice on the second draft. Nancy Gau-
thier read and commented on chapter 2; Catherine Mardikes and Jacqueline
Long reviewed chapter I. The errors and infelicities that remain are mine.
Invitations to speak on the topic of this book made it possible for me to
discuss and refine my ideas. Jinty Nelson, Waiter Pohl, and Mary Carruthers
(at London, Vienna, and New York, respectively, in 1999 and 2000) give me
my first opportunities to speak on the subject. A talk at the Sorbonne in 2oor,
at the welcome invitation of Monique Bourin and Claude Gauvard, allowed
me to consider emotions in politics. My colleagues at the Loyola Medieval
Studies Center-Leslie Dossey, Blake Dutton, Allen Frantzen, Theresa
Gross-Diaz, Jacqueline Long, Dermis Martin, the late Michael Masi, Sally
Metzler-were kind enough to adopt the topic "Emotions and Gestures" for
our 2oor lecture series at my request, giving us all the occasion to explore the
subject with our students and me the chance to sum up my thoughts in a lec-
ture that eventually became an article, "Worrying about Emotions in His-
tory?'
I thank Richard Abels, Ann Astell, Frans:ois Bougard, Karl Brunner, Rob-
ert Bucholz, Isabelle Cochelin, Mayke de Jong, Sharon Farmer, Rachel Ful-
ton, Mary Garrison, Claude Gauvard, Hans-Werner Goetz, Andrea Grieseb-
ner, Lynn Hunt, Paul HyamsLRobert Jacobs, Gerhard Jaritz, Jorg Jarnut, C.
Stephen Jaeger, Ingrid Kasten, Richard Kieckhefer, Carol Lansing, Regine Le
Jan, Maureen Miller, Piroska Nagy, Barbara Newman, Susie Phillips, Walter
Pohl, Ann Roberts, Alan Thacker, Anna Trumbore, and Marta VanLanding-
ham for further opportunities to present my work at venues ranging from Vi- I had the equally keen honor and pleasure to be invited to the University
enna to Santa Barbara during the period 2002 to 2005. of Utrecht in June 2005, where I taught a course on the history of emotions
In April 2001 I spent a memorable day at the invitation of Stephen D. and gave a lecture series on, in effect, what would become this book. Mayke
White and Elizabeth Pastan teaching "Emotions" to their joint seminar at de Jong was my kind, generous, and tireless host; I am deeply grateful to her.
Emory University (Atlanta). In November 2001 through January 2002, I had Symke Haverkamp was my outstanding teaching assistant. I, am grateful to
a magical experience as Scholar in Residence at the American Academy of the students and auditors in both classes and lectures and should like to single
Rome, thanks to the kind invitation of Lester K. Little. There I worked on out for particular thanks Giselle de Nie, Rob Meens, and Otto Vervaart.
the materials that would become chapters 3, 5, and 6 of this book, and I was I now turn with love and affection to my family-my husband, Tom; my
able to present some of my work to tl1at diverse and learned audience, which children, Jess and Frank; my mother, Roz; my sister, Oms. They know, and I
I warmly thank. I should in particular like to record my gratitude to Carmela am grateful for it, that "emotional support'' for a medievalist often means
Franklin, a marvelous and generous guide to Rome's archives. Daniela Ro- leaving her alone for very long periods of time in the company of a computer
magnoli's invitation to write for the catalogue I!Medioevo Europeo di ]acques and a great many books.
Le Coffin 2003 as well as spealc about emotions in Parma gave me my first ex-
perience lecturing in Italian, a heady moment for which I am enormously
grateful.
I am indebted to the National Endowment for the Humanities for a Fel-
lowship in 1999-2000 that allowed me to launch the research for this book. I
thank Loyola University Chicago for supporting this project in numerous
ways: a subvention during 1999-20oo; a leave of absence so that I might go
to Rome in 2001; a fellowship (2002) to attend Loyola's Center for Ethics,
where I studied (under David Ozar) the connection between ethical tl1eories
and notions of emotion; the constant support of my department, colleagues,
and chairs Anthony Cardoza and Susan Hirsch; the interest of my graduate
students Will Cavert, Kirsten DeVries, Andrew Donnelly, Thomas Greene,
Vance Martin, Prances Mitilineos, Daniel O'Gorman, Jilana Ordman, and
Alan Zola; and the efficient, unstinting, and knowledgeable help of History
Subject librarian Michael Napora and Interlibrary Loan librarians Ursula
Scholz and Jennifer Stegen.
I must also mention two extraordinary visiting professorships. In May
2004, at the invitation of Franc;ois Menant, Regine Le Jan, and Monique
Bourin, I had the honor and pleasure to be Professeur invite at the Ecole
Normale Superieure, where I gave three papers in the seminars (respectively)
of Franc;ois Menant, Regine Le Jan, and Antoine Lilti. After each lecture, as
soon as the discussion began, tl1e first question to be posed was invariably:
''Are you really talking about emotions?" And so I learned, if rather late, that
"emotions" is in many ways an Anglophone category. I am indebted to the
questions and comments of those seminar audiences, and should like to men-
tion Dominique Iogna-Prat in particular, who in addition to participating at
the lectures was also their translator!

xiv } Acknowledgments Acknowledgments { xv


ABBREVIATIONS

AASS Acta Sanctorum quotquot toto orbe coluntu1j ed. Joannus


Bollandus et al., 67 vols. (1640-1940)
AHR American Historical Review
ChLA Chartae Latinae Antiquiores
CCSL Corpus christianorum. Series Latina
CSEL Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum latinorum
Greg. Tur. Gregory of Tours
GC Liber in gloria confessorum
GM Liber in gloria martyrum
Histories Historiarum libri X
V] Liber de passione et virtutibus sancti ]uliani martyris
VM Libri I-IV de virtutibus beatiMartini episcopi
VP Liber Vitae Patrum
Gregoryi Gregory I the Great
MGH Monumenta Germaniae Historica
AA Auctores Antiquissimi
DMerov Diplomata regum francorum e stirpe Merovingica
SRM Scriptores rerum merovingicarum
PL Patrologia Latina, ed. Migne
RICG Recueil des inscriptions chretiennes de la Gaule anterieures laa
Renaissance carolingienne
I Premiere Be!gique, ed. N ancy Gauthier
VIII Aquitaine premiere, ed. Frans;oise Prevot
XV Viennoise du Nord, ed. Henri I. Marrou and Franc;oise
Descombes
se Sources chretiennes
TCCG Topographie chretienne des cites de la Gaule des origines au
milieu du VIII' siecle, ed. Nancy Gauthier and J.-Ch.
Picard
Clermont TCCG 6: Province ecctesiastique de Bout;ges (Aquitania Prima)
Trier TCCG r: Province ecctesiastique de Treves (Be!gica Prima)
Vienne TCCG 3: Provinces ecctesiastiques de Vienne et d'Arles
EMOTIONAL
il
! COMMUNITIES
I'
I IN THE
EARLY MIDDLE
AGES
This is a book about the history of emotions. The topic is paradoxically very
old- historians have always talked about emotions- and almost entirely un-
explored, since for the most part such tallc has been either unfocused or mis-
guided. For the unfocused var~ty, consider Tacitus, who, when describing
the condition of Rome at Nero's death, said that the senators were "joyous"
(laeti); the commoners "roused to hope" (in spem erecti); and the lowest
classes "mournful" (maesti).l He did not intend thereby a serious discussion
of emotions but rather a lively evocation of the different classes at Rome
and their disparate interests. 2 Historians continue to write in this way when
they wish to be colorful. Thus David Fromkin tells us that on the eve of the
First World War the German chancellor and senior officers "awaited events
with different hopes, fears, and expectations?'3 These are perfectly ordinary
and innocent examples of "unfocused" historical emotion talk. I shall leave
until later in this chapter the discussion of focused studies, for they are a rel-
atively recent development to which this book must pay considerable atten-
tion. Suffice to say that for the most part they have been inspired by a par-
ticularly simplistic notion of the emotions that malces passions not so much
different from age to age as either "on" (impulsive and violent) or "off" (re-
strained).
The fact that there is a history of emotions but that it has been studied
(for the most part) wrongly or badly is one reason that I have written this
book. There is another reason as well: I am convinced that, as sociologists
already know very well, "the source of emotion, its governing laws, and its
consequences are an inseparable part of the social process?'4 Historians rieed
to take emotions as seriously as they have lately taken other "invisible" top-

r. Tacitus, The Histories 1.4, trans. Clifford H. Moore, Loeb Classical Library (London,
!925), p. 8.
2. Ramsay MacMullen, however, argues in Feelings in History, Ancient and Modem (Clare-

mont, Calif., 2003) that writers like Tacitus did their history exactly right and that modern
historians too should learn to tuck passions into their bloodless prose. But tl1is they do, as
David Fromkin in note 3 below exemplifies.
3. David Fromkin, Europe's Last Summer: Who Started the Great War in 1914? (New York,
2004 ),p. r8o.
4. David D. Franks, "The Bias against Emotions in Western Civilization:' in Sociology of
ics, such as ecology and gender. I use as my starting point the Early Middle Thus far I have spoken of emotions in history and emotional communi-
Ages because the Middle Ages remains, despite caveats, a direct ancestor of ties as if the meaning of the word "emotions" were self-evident. It is not,
modern Western civilization, and the Early Middle Ages is its link to the an- even though as recently as zoor Martha Nussbaum declared that "emo-
cient world and thus to the Greek and Roman legacy of ideas and words tions" was a universal "sub-category of thought?'6 In fact, the use of the
having to do with emotions. The Early Middle Ages is thus a natural start- catch-all term "emotions" to refer to "joy, love, anger, fear, happiness, guilt,
ing point. Focused studies of emotions have treated the Middle Ages as one sadness, embarrassment [and] hope" is quite recent even in the Anglophone
emotional period. I challenge this view. Even very short time spans, such as world. 7 The Oxford English Dictionary records that the earliest meaning of
the sixth to late seventh centuries, which are the ones covered in this book, the term (dating from 1579) was "a social agitation"; "emotion" gained the
saw vast changes in the uses of emotional vocabulary and expressive reper- significance of mental agitation only about a century later.Nevertheless, as
tories. But arriving at this conclusion requires considering contexts far more Thomas Dixon has shown, it was not the favored word for psychological
precise than "medieval" or "modern?' turmoil until about 18oo. 8 Before then, people spoke more often-and
I postulate the existence of"emotional communities": groups in which more precisely- of passions, affections, and sentiments. All of these referred
people adhere to the same norms of emotional expression and value-or to fairly clear subsets of the words and ideas that today come under the um-
devalue-the same or related emotions. More than one emotional commu- brella of emotions. It was the scientific community that privileged the term
nity may exist-indeed normally does exist-contemporaneously, and "emotions" and gave it the portmanteau meaning that it now has. Otniel
these communities may change over time. Some come to the fore to dom- Dror has demonstrated tl1e advantages that this offered to white-coated
inate our sources, then recede in importance. Others are almost entirely professionals in their laboratories. 9
hidden from us, though we may imagine they exist and may even see some Many European languages have more than one word for the phenomena
of their effects on more visible groups. In this book I trace a number of that Anglophones call "emotions:' and often these terms are not inter-
emotional communities, and in several instances I show how one displaced changeable. In France, love is not an emotion; it is a sentiment. Anger, how-
another, at least from the point of view of the production of texts. I do not ever, is an emotion) for an emotion is short term and violent, while a sentiment
claim to have found all the emotional communities of even the sixth and is more subtle and of longer duration. German has Gefohle) a broad term
seventh centuries; if this book's title were to be glossed, it would be as that is used when feelings are strong and irrational, rather like les emotions in
Some Emotional Communities, not The Emotional Communities in the
Early Middle Ages. s
ture tl1at might emerge from the latter project in my study of epitaphs in three cities; see
chapter 2.
Emotions: Syllabi and Instructional Materials, ed. Catherine G. Valentine, Steve Derne, and 6. Martha C. Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions (Cambridge,
Beverley Cuthbertson Johnson (New York, 1999), p. 29. 2001), esp. p. 24 and n. 3. But Benedicte Grima, The Petformance of Emotion among Paxtun
s. Ripe for exploration are the emotional communities of St. Augustine (d. 430) and St. Women: "The Misfortunes Which Have Befallen Me" (Austin, 1992), pp. 34-39, points out that
Jerome (d. 420 ), which perhaps overlapped rather little. Similarly begging for study are the there is no word that tracks "emotion" in Paxto, and she provides bibliography on the topic
emotional communities of the southern Gallic elite, whether represented by the generation for otl1er cultural groups.
of Paulinus of Nola (d. 431) or tl1at of Sidonius Apollinaris (d. ea. 484) and Ruricius of 7. The list of words is taken from Randolph R. Cornelius, The Science ofEmotion: Research
Limoges (d. sro). I, however, have chosen to begin my study later, with the "two Gregories;' and Tradition in the Psychowgy ofEmotion (Upper Saddle River, N.J., 1996), p. r.
one at Rome, the other in Gaul, ea. 6oo. They call for quite different metl1odological strate- 8. Thomas Dixon, From Passions to Emotions: The Creation ofa Secular Psychowgical Category
gies, which makes them useful for an exploratory essay such as this. Furtl1er, since tl1ey lived (Cambridge, 2003). See also Dylan Evans, Emotion: The Science of Sentiment (Oxford, 2001),
around the same time, they may be fruitfully compared. Presumably every social group that and Robert Dimit, "European 'Emotion' before tl1e Invention of Emotions: The Passions of
wrote enough could be a "test case" for an emotional community. Augustine, Jerome, and the Mind?' I thank Professor Dimit for allowing me to read his article before publication.
tl1e circle ofRuricius clearly are wortl1 the trouble for themselves. Also worth the trouble, but 9. Otniel E. Dror, "The Scientific Image of Emotion: Experience and Technologies ofln-

for very different reasons, would be a study of all the emotional communities contempora- scription;' Configurations 7 (1999): 355-401; idem, "Techniques of the Brain and the Paradox
neous with one another in some defined space. I have tried to give a hint of t!1e sort of pie- of Emotions, 1880-1930;' Science in Context 14 (2001): 643-60.

2 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 3


French, while Empfindungen are more contemplative and inward, rather deed, it had some distant ancestors-in the Latin phrase motus animi (mo-
closer to les sentiments. Italians speak of emozioni and sentimenti; the two tions of the soul) and in the Latin adjective commotus (moved). To vary my
words sometimes have the same implications as their counterparts in prose, I also mal\:e use of "passions:' "feelings:' and, to a lesser extent, "af-
French, while at other times they are virtually equivalent, much as the En- fects" as equivalents of"emotions?'
glish word "feelings" tracks approximately the same lexical field as "emo-
tions?'10 THE "CHILDHOOD OF MAN"
How important should these distinctions be for our inquiry into the This is not the first book to trace the history of emotions. But the topic-as
"emotional communities" of the early Middle Ages? If they constituted wa- a focus rather tl1an as a colorful aside-is relatively recent, having effectively
tertight definitions, it would be necessary to rethink the title as well as the begun less than a century ago with the work of Johan Huizinga. In his
very terms of this book. But they are nothing of the sort. Consider the cat- perennially popular book on the Late Middle Ages, Huizinga likened the
egory "passions:' which in the mid-eighteenth century was a term in active emotional tenor of the period to that of modern childhood: "Every experi-
use. In Samuel Johnson's dictionary (1755) it was defined by one autl1ority ence:' he wrote, "had that degree of directness and absoluteness that joy and
as "the receiving of any action in a large philosophical sense; in a more lim- sadness still have in the mind of a child?'13 It was a "fairy tale" world where
ited philosophical sense, it signifies any of the affections of human nature; feelings were "sharper" and "unmediated?' "We have to transpose ourselves
as love, fear, joy, sorrow: but the common people confine it only to into this impressionability of mind, into this sensitivity to tears and spiritual
anger." 11 Thus, although "passions" had a distinct connotation (powerful repentance, into this susceptibility, before we can judge how colorful and
feelings such as anger), it also might compass the same terms that were sig- intensive life was then?'l4 Passions of every sort held sway; the medieval city
nified by "affections?' Similarly, my Petit Robert, published in 1985, defines was filled with "vacillating moods of unrefined exuberance, sudden cruelty,
both sentiment and emotion as a reaction affective, an "affective reaction:' and tender emotions:' while "daily life offered unlimited range for acts of
though (generally) of different intensities and durations. Clearly there is a flaming passion and childish imagination?' 15 Huizinga's Middle Ages was
continuum, not a decisive break, between emotion and sentiment, passion the childhood of man.
and affection.U Childhood, however, never lasts. The Late Middle Ages was, for
The ancient world had many emotion words, as we shall see in chapter r, Huizinga, its last gasp. The modern world-the busy, dull, dispassionate
and it also had generic terms that were about equivalent to the term "emo- world of adults-was on its way. This was clear from Huizinga's repeated
tions:' though never precisely so. I use the term emotions in this book with use of tl1e word "still" (nog in Dutch). Thus he noted that "a conflict be-
fulllmowledge that it is a convenience: a constructed term that refers to af- tween royal princes over a chessboard was still as plausible as a motive in the
fective reactions of all sorts, intensities, and durations. We shall see that, de- fifteenth century as in Carolingian romance"; and "during the fifteenth cen-
spite its drawbacks, it is serviceable, even for the medieval world where, in- tury the immediate emotional affect is still directly expressed in ways that
frequently break through the veneer of utility and calculation?'16 Again, put-
w. I am grateful to Riccardo Cristiani, Dominique Iogna-Prat, Regine Le Jan, Waiter ting the same point another way, medieval "politics are not yet completely in
I Pohl, and the audiences of my 2004 lectures in Paris for enlightening discussions on these the grip of bureaucracy and protocol?' 17 Adulthood was the world of"util-
,I
! points. Note that a recent survey of the emotions in (mainly modern) history in Italian is ti-
tled Storia delle passione (History ofthe Passions). The editor says, presumably witl1 a wink, that
she chose the term to contrast it with tl1e "dispassionate" (spassionata) present. More seri- 13. Herftttif der Middeleeuwen (Haarlem, 1919 ). I quote here from Johan Huizinga, The Au-
ously, she sees a difference between ''passioni" and "emozioni": passions are inseparable from tumn of the Middle Ages, trans. Rodney J. Payton and Ulrich Mammitzsch (Chicago, 1996),
their forms of expression (rappresentazione). See Storia delle Passioni, ed. Silvia Vegetti Finzi p.r.
(Rome, 1995), pp. v-vi. 14. Huizinga,Autumn oftheMiddleAges, pp. 7-8.
n. Samuel Johnson,A Dictionary of the English Language (1755; repr., New York, 1967), s.v. 15. Ibid., PP 2, 8.
"passions"; quoted in Dixon, From Passions to Emotions, p. 62. 16. Ibid., pp. 8,15 (emphasis mine). I tl1ankMayke de Jong for helping me with the Dutch.
12. I am grateful to Damien Boquet for discussions on this point. 17. Ibid., p. 12 (emphasis mine).

4 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 5


ity and calculation;' of "bureaucracy and protocol"; it was Huizinga's own tionology'' or its close relation, "the civilizing process.'' In 1985 Peter and
era. Carol Steams created the term "emotionology'' to describe "the standards
Huizinga's words, by now nearly a century old, ought to be the instruc- that a society, or a definable group within a society, maintains toward basic
tive relic of an earlier historical sensibility. In fact his view of the Middle emotions and their appropriate expression.''23 Before the days of emotionol-
Ages remains foundational today, especially for the history of emotions, vi- ogy-that is, before the mid-eighteenth century-there was no internalized
olence, impulsivity, behavior, and crime (all of which tend to be seen as re- self-restraint. The Stearnses claimed that "public temper tantrums, along
lated or even identical).l 8 While the ontogenic theory of history-the theory with frequent weeping and boisterous joy, were far more common in pre-
that traces a trajectory from infancy to adulthood- is today out of fashion, modern society than they were to become in the nineteenth and twentieth
it persists "undercover" in the history of human behavior and feeling. In the centuries. Adults were in many ways, by modern standards; childlike in
1930s theAnnales school adopted it in the guise of the "structure" of"men- their indulgence in temper, which is one reason that they so readily played
talities.''19 A certain historiographical strand continues this tradition today. games with children.''24
Jean Delumeau in France and Peter Dinzelbacher in Austria, for example, Powerfully bolstering this "up from childhood" history was the theory of
treat fear as a built-in structure of the medieval mind. In Rassurer et proteger the "civilizing process" elaborated by Norbert Elias in the 1930s, but which
Delumeau speal(S of a sentiment de securit/, 20 deriving the idea from John began to mal'e inroads in historical circles only in the I970S, when it was
Bowlby's studies of infantile needs. 21 By terming benedictions, processions, translated into English, French, and Italian. Elias's book was a grand syn-
indulgences, and so on "mechanisms of reassurance;' Delumeau reinforces thesis, perhaps the last such of the twentieth century. It embraced history,
Huizinga's vision of medieval people as childlike in their goals and behav- sociology, and psychology in two dazzling-and extremely entertaining-
iors.22 volumes. Like Max Weber, Elias was interested in rationalization, bureau-
Elsewhere the paradigm of Huizinga persists under the cloak of "emo- cratization, and the juggernaut of the modern state, with its "monopoly of
force.'' Like Freud, however, he was keen to understand the individual psy-
r8. See, for example, Thomas W. Gallant, "Honor, Masculinity, and Ritual Knife Fighting che. He faulted the sociologists for separating ideas and ideology from what
in Nineteenth-Century Greece;' AHR 105 (2ooo): 358-82, with further bibliography. he, adopting Freud, called "the structure of drives, the direction and form of
19. See Marc Bloch, Feudal Sociel)', trans. L. A. Manyon (Chicago, r96r), p. 73: the Middle human affects and passions.'' 25 At the same time, he thought that the
Ages was "a civilization in which moral or social convention did not yet require well-bred Freudians separated the psyche from society. Lamenting the narrow vision
people to repress their tears and their raptures" (emphasis mine). For further discussion of of psychologists, Elias pointed out that they made "no distinction . . . be-
this aspect of theAnnales school, see Barbara H. Rosenwein, "Worrying about Emotions in
tween the natural raw material of drives, which indeed perhaps changes
History;' AHR 107 (2002): 921-4-5, esp. 832-34-.
little throughout the whole history of mankind, and the increasingly more
20. Jean Delumeau, Rassurer et prott!ger. Le sentiment de stfcurittf dans l'Occident d'autrefois
(Paris, 1989 ). The idea was already anticipated in Jean Delumeau, La Peur en Occident, XIV'-
firmly wrought structures of control.''26 Elias's focus was thus on the his-
XVIII' siecle. Une cite assit!gtfe (Paris, 1978), pp. 14-9-56, a section entided "Le sentiment d'in- toricity of the superego; in his view, the process of civilizing set up more
securite?' See also Peter Dinzelbacher, Angst im Mittelalter. Teuftls-, Todes- und Gotteser- and more controls over the drives (or affects, impulses, emotions-Elias
fahrung; Mentalitatsgeschichte und Ikonographie (Paderbom, 1996). More recendy, Dinzel-
bacher, "La donna, il figlio e l'amore. La nuova emozionalita del XII secolo;' in Il secolo XII:
la renovatio dell'Europa cristiana, ed. Giles Constable et al. (Bologna, 2003 ), pp. 207-52, has 23. Peter N. Steams wid1 Carol Z. Steams, "Emotionology: Clarifying the Histmy of
argued that affectionate love, a sign of maturity, was lacking in the Early Middle Ages be- Emotions and Emotional Standards;' AHR 90 (1985): 813.
cause the conditions oflife were too primitive and punishing for it to thrive. 24-. Carol Zisowitz Steams and Peter N. Stearns,Anger: The Struggle for Emotional Control
21. John Bowlby,Attachment and Loss, vol. r,Attachment (New York, 1969), pp. 200-203. in America's History (Chicago, 1986), p. 25.
22. Delumeau, La Peur, p. 17, speaks of the importance of"attachment" between the direct- 25. Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process, trans. Edmund Jephcott, rev. ed. (Oxford, 2ooo ),
ing classes and the commonality. When the directing classes refuse the love from below, peur p. 4-08.
et haine (fear and hate) are rl1e results. 26. Ibid., p. 4-09.

6} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 7


r
I

jl
used such words interchangeably). The energies of the Western psyche be- sense, moved within .... An individualized pattern of near-automatic
i came progressively compartmentalized, so that eventually cognition and habits is established and consolidated within [the human being], a specific
reason became fairly impermeable to emotions. 'super-ego; which endeavours to control, transform, or suppress his affects
Thus the importance of history to Elias. He insisted that what he was in keeping with the social structure.''32 As society became more complex, tl1e
tracing in the "civilizing process" was empirical, not theoretical. He had state more powerful, and individuals more interdependent, the controls
made "a scrutiny of documents of historical experience.''27 Above all he only increased, so that modern man's psyche today is hedged about in every
looked at books of etiquette, because he saw a direct link between behavior, way.33
emotion, and impulse control. He quoted the Disticha Catonis (written in Despite the fact that almost every element of this argument has prob-
the third or fourth century and popular thereafter), which he called the lems, Elias's theory remains triumphant today. 34 When I first began to write
"code of behavior encountered throughout the Middle Ages.'' Its maxims, this very paragraph, tl1e New York Times was telling us that "Elias has
such as "You should follow honorable men and vent your wrath on the posthumously become [a] theoretical guru.'' Barbara Hanawalt, a promi-
wicked;' were for Elias evidence of medieval "simplicity, its nai:Vete.'' Paint- nent contemporary medievalist, was quoted in the same article as saying,
ing the by then familiar Huizingan picture, Elias continued: "There are [in "Elias is onto something: people begin to change tl1eir notions of how
the Middle Ages], as in all societies where the emotions are expressed more people should behave. In the VJ.tl1 century people are concerned with
violently and directly, fewer psychological nuances and complexities in the whetl1er someone is of good or ill repute; it's a collective, community judg-
general stock of ideas. There are friend and foe, desire and aversion, good ment. When you get into the rsth century, the question is about someone's
and bad people.''28
'governance.' There is a shift from community reputation to an emphasis on
The lack of a strong overriding power meant that medievallmights-for internal control.''35
Elias, they were the key to the whole discussion- could give in to their vio-
lent impulses: "The release of the affects in battle in the Middle Ages was no
32. Ibid., p. 375.
longer, perhaps, quite so uninhibited as in the early period of the Great Mi-
33. Norbert Elias attempts to explain why the restraints were less durable in Germany-
grations. But it was open and uninhibited enough.''29
that is, why Eichmann existed and the Holocaust took place; Elias, The Germans: Power
This situation changed gradually. At the courts of the most powerful me- Struggles and the Development ofHabitus in the Nineteenth and Iiventieth Centuries, ed. Michael
dieval princes tl1e gentling influence of the "lady'' and the tyranny of the Schroter, trans. Eric Dunning and Stephen Mennell (New York, 1996).
lord combined to mal<e "more peaceful conduct obligatory."30 Later, in tl1e 34. The reception of Elias's work is assessed in Gerd Schwerhoff, "ZivilisationsprozeJS und
sixteenth century, the process took hold permanently. At the courts of ab- Geschichtswissenschaft. Norbert Elias' Forschungsparadigma in historischer Sicht;' Historische
solute rulers who monopolized all power, men were forced by circumstance Zeitschrift 266 (1998): 561-606. Elias's historical accuracy regarding the early modern court and
its culture is critiqued in Jeroen Duindam, Myths ofPower: Norbert Elias and the Early Modem
to control themselves. Eventually external requirements effected intrapsy-
European Court (Amsterdam, [1994]). The Freudian theory of drives, on which Elias's theory
chic transformations: ''As the individual was now embedded in the human
fundamentally depends, has been repudiated by most psychologists (see below) and even many
network quite differently from before and moulded by the web of his de- psychoanalysts, e.g., John Bowl by (Attachment and Loss, vol. r, chap. 7). Daniela Romagnoli has
pendencies, so too did the structure of individual consciousness and affects shown that comportment books were already produced in the sixth century and became abun-
31
change.'' And, looking at the matter psychodynamically, Elias argued that dant by the twelfth, not only at the courts and the monasteries of Europe but aqove all in the
"wars and feuds diminish .... But at the same time the battlefield is in a cities; see her "La courtoisie dans la ville: un modele complexe;' in La ville et la cour. Des bonnes
' et des mauvaises manieres, ed. Daniela Romagnoli (Paris, 1995 ), chap. I. See also Medieval Con-
duct, ed. Kathleen Ashley and Robert L. A. Clark (Minneapolis, 2001). Finally, a recent collec-
27. Ibid., P X.
tion of articles thoroughly critiques Elias's use, abuse, and ignorance of sources: Zivilisations-
28. Ibid., p. 55
Prozesse. Zu Erziehungsschriften in der Vormoderne, ed. Riidiger Schnell (Cologne, 2004).
29. Ibid., p. I62.
35. Alexander Stille, "Did Knives and Forks Cut Murders? Counting Backward, Historians
30. Ibid., pp. 245-46.
Resurrect Crime Statistics and Find the Middle Ages More Violent Than Now;' New York
31. Ibid., p. 397.
Times, May 3, 2003, pp.i\21-23.
8 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 9
Emotionology and the civilizing process are convenient theories for his- the late 90s, he went further, putting aristocratic love at center stage. This
torians. For those studying the postmedieval period they provide a virtual was a highly restrained love that was understood at the time as "the source
tabula rasa-a Middle Ages of childish (read: unmediated) emotionality of a morality and a heroism of self-control and self-mastery.''4 Yet this love
and impulsivity-on which the early modern period can build its edifices of flourished as early as the ixth century, and it experienced a real blossoming
autonomy and reason. 36 But "early modern" itself is a historical construct among the members of the Carolingian court in the ninth century.
whose validity must come from a sound understanding of the Middle Ages. The largely literary approaches of Leclercq, Moore, and J aeger were
Was the Middle Ages emotionally childish, impulsive, and unrestrained? complemented by the work of some legal historians. J.E.A. Jolliffe, pioneer
Some medievalists have already found the contrary to be the case. More- of a legal school that saw functionality (rather than pure impulsivity) in me-
over, current theories of the emotions challenge the very possibility. dieval emotional expression, argued that the medieval English Icing's anger
was an effective political tool.4 1 Because tl1e royal public and private per-
UPENDING OLD MODELS sonae could not be separated, Jolliffe argued, "the ruler's personal hates and
Even Elias admitted restraints at the medieval princely courts, so the fact fears were released as efficient forces to play about the political world.''42
that literary scholars discovered that troubadour poetry celebrated love- Royal anger-ira or malevolentia-placed disfavored persons in a sort of
delicate, temperate, and deeply felt- hardly rattled the paradigm. But in the "limbo"; they were not quite outlaws, but neither were they under the law's
1950s such love was discovered in the monasteries as well. Jean Leclercq, for protection.43 Royal wrath.brought men and institutions to heel. The study
example, praised monastic love-tl1e love that Cistercian brethren delighted of the Icing's emotions was, for Jolliffe, essential for understanding the
to explore both in relation to themselves and to God-as sublime self- twelfth-century polity.
expression.37 Soon John C. Moore's Love in Twelfth-Century France found W. H. Auden had written "Law Like Love" a decade before Jolliffe wrote
love not only in the monasteries and the courts but also in the cities, among about his twelfth-century lcings. 44 In the late 196os, Fredric Cheyette used
the "schoolmen.''38 Auden's poem to drive home the points of his pioneering essay on pre-
Further eroding the model was C. Stephen Jaeger, who, in a series of thirteenth-century French law. Arbiters out of court-normally amici
writings that began in the 198os, found the "civilizing process" taking place (friends, cronies) of both sides- not remote judges en banc, made informal
at the courts of tenth- and eleventh-century German imperial rulers.39 In legal systems work precisely by recognizing the emotional components of
disputing. As Cheyette put it, the arbiters "must assuage anger, soothe
36. But scholars of the ancient world can adopt Elias as well: Willian1 V. Harris, &straining wounded pride, find the solution tl1at will bring peace.''45 Just as Cheyette
Rage: The Ideology ofAnger Control in Classical Antiquity (Cambridge, Mass., 2001), p. 150, was writing, a few English and American antl1ropologists were adopting a
thinks that the "civilizing process" occurred for "the first time" in the ancient world. Thus processual model of dispute resolution. 46 Their colleagues in medieval his-
Harris continues the bracketing off of the Middle Ages first "achieved" by the Renaissance.
37 Jean Leclercq, IJamour des lettres et le desir de Dieu. Initiation aux auteurs monastiques du
40. C. Stephen Jaeger, Ennobling Love: In Search ofa Lost Sensibility (Philadelphia, 1999 ), ix.
MoyenAge (Paris, 1957); translated by Catherine Misrahi as The Love ofLearning and the De-
41. J. E. A. Jolliffe, Angevin Kingship, 2d ed. (London, 1963), chap. 4. The first edition of
sire for God (New York, 1961); see also idem, Monks and Love in Ilvelfth-Century France (Ox-
ford, 1979 ). this book appeared in 1955.
38. Moore, Love in Twelfth-Century France (Philadelphia, 1972). See now as well John W. 42. Ibid., 95
Baldwin, The Language ofSex: Five Voices from Northern France around I200 (Chicago, 1994). 43- Ibid., p. 97.
44. W. H. Auden, "Law Like Love;' in The Collected Poetry ofW H. Auden (New York,
39 C. Stephen Jaeger, The Origins of Courtliness: Civilizing Trends and the Formation of
Courtly Ideals, 939-I2IO (Philadelphia, 1985); idem, The Envy ofAngels: Cathedral Schools and 1945), pp. 74-'76.
45. Fredric L. Cheyette, "Giving Each His Due;' in Debating the Middle Ages: Issues and
Social Ideals in Medieval Europe, 9SO-I200 (Philadelphia, 1994). Janet L. Nelson argues that
courtliness "was made in the earlier Middle Ages, in the courts of so-called barbarian kings";
Radings, ed. Lester K. Little and Barbara H. Rosenwein (Oxford 1998), pp. 170-79, quote
on p. 176; originally published as "Suum cuique tribuere;' French Historical Studies 6
Nelson, "Gendering Courts in the Early Medieval West;' in Gender in the Early Medieval
World: East and West, 300-goo, ed. Leslie Brubaker and Julia M. H. Smith (Cambridge, (1969/70): 287-99
46. Key readings for this group: The Ethnography of Law, ed. Laura Nader (Menasha,
2004), p. 186.

ro } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { n


tory soon joined them. 47 This confluence of interests need not necessarily rather than law, argued that emotions were "staged"-as all emotions are
have led to emotions history, but in fact it did so, as historians recognized packaged-to relay important information about power and authority.
the key role of emotions in moments of crisis and dispute. In the early Both rulers and their subjects followed "rules of the game": ritual acts, in-
198os, Michael Clanchy was quoting the Leges Henrici Primi-where amor cluding emotional displays, that followed clear models and signaled clear
(love) triumphs over Judicium (justice)-and citing anthropological litera- messages to all concerned. 51
ture on law in acephalous societies in a paper that broadened out from the It is thus evident that many medievalists have moved beyond the para-
English village "loveday'' to the whole question of law as "the extension and digm of an emotionally childlike and impulsive Middle Ages. They have
reinforcement of bonds of affection beyond the immediate family?'4 8 carved out arenas -love in the monastery, love in the courts, staged anger in
By the nineties, a number of Anglo-American scholars of medieval law ceremonies oflordship and kingship, love in the twelfth century-where the
considered emotions to be as normal and central a topic in their field as model does not apply. Since the 1970s they have found strong theoretical
"felony'' and "trespass" had been for Pollock and Maitland. 49 These emo- ground for their assertions, as a number of them explicitly recognize, be-
tions were understood not as tl1e products of"vacillating moods" but ratl1er cause of tl1e revolution in the way in which emotions came to be conceptu-
as tied to dearly held goals and values. Thus William Ian Miller wrote on af- alized by psychologists, anthropologists, and sociologists.
fect and honor, Stephen D. White looked at anger and the exercise oflord- The "old" theory of the emotions was hydraulic. Whether Darwinian or
ship, and Paul Hyams and Daniel Smail explored the role of rancor and ha- Freudian, psychologists assumed that passions were "drives" or forms of en-
tred in the development of law. 50 In Germany Gerd Althoff, approaching ergy that would surge forth toward "discharge" unless they were controlled,
similar legal and political materials from an interest in nonverbal gesture tamped down, or channeled. 52 The theories of the 1960s and 1970s, how-
ever, were free of instincts, drives, and energies. Thus for Magda Arnold, an
early leader in the field of cognitive psychology, emotions were the result of
Wise., 1965); The Disputing Process: Law in Ten Societies> ed. Laura Nader and Hany F. Todd
(New York, 1978); Simon Roberts, Order and Dispute: An Introduction to Legal Anthropology a certain type of perception, a relational perception that appraised an object
(Harmondsworth, England, 1979).
47 See for example, the essays in Disputes and Settlements: Law and Human Relations in the
West, ed. John Bossy (Cambridge, 1983). 51. The key studies are Gerd Althoff, "Empi:irung, Tranen, Zerknirschung. 'Emotionen' in
48. Michael Clanchy, "Law and Love in the Middle Ages:' in Disputes and Settlements> ed. der i:iffentlichen Kommunikation des Mittelalters:' Friihmittlelalterliche Studien 30 (1996):
Bossy, p. 50. 60-79; idem, "Ira Regis: Prolegomena to a History of Royal Anger:' in Angers Past> ed.
49. Nevertheless, their contribution was (and is) not widely noted. It is telling that Rosenwein, chap. 3; idem, "Demonstration und Inszenierung. Spielregeln der Kommunika-
Michael Toch claims to be drawing upon mentalites methodology in discussing the emotions tion in mittelalterlicher Offentlichkeit:' Friihmittelalterliche Studien 27 (1993): 27-50. See also
evident in the records of a Bavarian manorial court, whereas in fact the author is more clearly idem, Otto III, trans. Phyllis G. Jestice (University Park, Pa., 2003). For others working
following the path of the Anglo-American legal historians delineated here; Toch, "Ethics, within this historiographical tradition, see Ruth Schmidt-Wiegand, "Gebardensprache im
Emotion and Self-interest: Rural Bavaria in the Later Middle Ages:' journal ofMedieval His- mittelalterlichen Recht:' Friihmittelalterliche Studien 16 (1982): 363-79; Martin J. Schubert,
tory 17 (1991): 135-47. Zur Theorie des Gebarens im Mittelalter. Analyse von nichtsprachlicher Auflerung in mittel-
50. William Ian Miller, Humiliation: And Other Essays on Honor, Social Discomfort> and Vio- hochdeutscher Epik: Rnlandslied> Eneasroman> Tristan (Cologne, 1991); Matthias Becher,
lence (Ithaca, N.Y., 1993), chap. 3; Stephen D. White, "The Politics of Anger:' in Angers Past: "'Cum lacrimis et gemitu': Vom Weinen der Sieger und der Besiegten im friihen und hohen
The Social Uses of an Emotion in the Middle Ages> ed. Barbara H. Rosenwein (Ithaca, N.Y., Mittelalter:' in Formen und Funktionen Ojfentlicher Kommunikation imMittelalter, ed. Gerd Al-
1998), chap. 6; Paul Hyams, R.ancor and Reconciliation in Medieval England (lthaca, N.Y. thoff and Verena Epp (Stuttgart, 2001), pp. 25-52.
2003), chap. 2; Daniel Lord Smail, "Hatred as a Social Institution in Late-Medieval Society:' 52. Charles Darwin postulated a "nerve-force" that was liberated in intense sensations,
Speculum 76 (2001): 90-126. Further essential studies along these lines: Richard E. Barton, some of them emotions; Darwin, The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals> 3d ed.,
"'Zealous Angd and the Renegotiation of Aristocratic Relationships in Eleventh- and ed. Paul Ekman (New York, 1998), p. 74. For Freud's theory of instinctual energy see, most
Twelfth-Century France:' inAngers Past> ed. Rosenwein, chap. 7; Claude Gauvard, '<JJe Grace conveniently, Sigmund Freud, The Complete Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis> trans. and
a
Especial.>> Crime> etat et societe en France la fin duMoyenAge> 2 vols. (Paris, 1991). ed. James Strachey (New York, 1966), chap. 31.

12 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 13


(or person or situation or fantasy) as "desirable or undesirable, valuable or agreeing that at least some emotions are "hardwired" in the human (and
harmfulfor me."53 Such appraisals depended on a person's notion of what animal) psyche, social constructionists point out that emotional expression
was good or bad; they were judgments based on past experience and pres- takes as many forms as there are cultures. Thus romantic love is privileged in
ent values and goals. Emotional sequences were not, then, impulses leading one place, reviled in another, and unknown in still a thirdP Anger is ex-
to intermediate moderating controls (or not), followed by behavior. That pressed by bodily swelling, reddening, or whitening in one culture, while in
was the old school. The new school argued a sequence that began with per- another it leads to wordy insults. 58 In Japan there is a feeling, amae) of con-
ception followed by appraisal, leading in turn to emotion, which was fol- tented dependence on another; but in English there is nothing comparable
lowed by action readiness. There were no impulses to tamp down and con- and presumably no feeling that corresponds to it. 59 No one is born knowing
trol, only appraisals- automatic, quick, and nonreflective. appropriate modes of expression, or whether to imagine emotions as inter-
Recent work in cognitive psychology puts great stress on goals. When nal or external, or whether to privilege or disregard an emotion. These
events or objects are "congruent" or "incongruent" with plans (as Craig ti1ings malce up the "feeling rules" that societies impart. 60 Putting social
Smith and Richard Lazarus put it), when they "interrupt" expectations and constructionism and the cognitive view together, we may say that if emo-
goals (as George Mandler would have it), or when they disrupt and/or ful- tions are assessments based on experience and goals, the norms of the indi-
fill our "best laid schemes" (as Keith Oatiey describes it), emotions are the vidual's social context provide ti1e framework in which such evaluations take
result. 54 Oatiey's theory in particular opens out from ti1e individual realm to place and derive their meaning. There is nothing whatever "hydraulic"-
the social precisely because of its connection to goals; for him "emotions nothing demanding release-in this cognitivistjsocial constructionist view.
manage transitions between plans;' while "social emotions help manage The psychologist Randolph Cornelius says that Anlericans would con-
transitions to new joint plans and help to maintain ti1em?' 55 The close con- sider amae "embarrassingly childish?'61 But the cognitive and social con-
nection between emotions and goals aligns them with conscious, well- structionist theories of emotion suggest that no emotion is childish. Even
considered thought; there is no need-indeed, it is incorrect-to separate for children, emotions are not "pure" or unmediated; all are the products of
emotions from ideas: the assessment of what is valuable or harmful has experience, and experience itself is shaped by ti1e practices and norms of a
everything to do with what individuals, groups, and societies want for person's household, neighborhood, and larger society. Even the most "im-
themselves. pulsive" of behaviors is judged so within a particular context. If an emo-
Further undermining the grip of the hydraulic model is social construc- tional display seems "extreme;' that is itself a perception from within a set of
tionism, an important offshoot of cognitive theory. 56 For the most part emotional norms that is socially determined.

53. Magda B. Arnold, Emotion and Personality) 2 vols. (New York, I96o), I:I7I (emphasis spouses to evolutionarily significant events:' while for social constructionists they are socially
mine). For an excellent guide to many current psychological theories of the emotions, see shaped responses to events that are socially defined as significant.
Cornelius, Science ofEmotion. For the evolutionary approach see, e.g., Steven Pinker, How the 57. William M. Reddy, "European Ways of Love: The Historical Specificity of Romantic
Mind Works) 2d ed. (New York, I999); for the view from the brain, see, e.g., Antonio R. Love:' paper presented for the workshop "Love, Religion, and Europeanness:' Kulturwis-
Damasio, The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making ofConsciousness (New senschaftliches Institut, Essen, Germany, February 2I-22, 2003. I am very grateful to Profes-
York, I999 ), and Joseph LeDoux, The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings ofEmo- sor Reddy for sending me a copy of this paper.
tionalLife (New York, I996). 58. Miller, Humiliation) chap. 3.
54. Craig A. Smith and Richard S. Lazarus, "Appraisal Components, Core Relational 59. On amae) see Takeo Doi, The Anatomy ofDependence) trans. John Bester (Tokyo, I973);
Themes, and the Emotions:' Cognition and Emotion 7 (I993): 233-69; George Mandler,Mind H. Morsbach and W. J. Tyler, ''A Japanese Emotion:Amae/' in The Social Construction ofEmo-
and Emotion (New York, I975), chap. 7; Keith Oatley, Best Laid Schemes: The Psychology ofEmo- tions) ed. Rom Ham: (Oxford, I986), chap. IS. Dylan Evans, who is presumably British,
tions (Cambridge, I992). claims that he has felt it (Emotion) pp. I-3).
55. Oatley, Best Laid Schemes) p. I78. 6o. For "feeling rules" see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Managed Heart: Commercializa-
56. Cornelius, Science of Emotion) p. I55, points out that social constructionism is "an out- tion ofHuman Feeling (Berkeley, I983); p. 76.
growth of the cognitive revolution?' But for cognitivists, "appraisals represent im1ate re- 6I. Cornelius, Science ofEmotion) p. I72.

I4 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { IS


baum cares to find a history. Here the Middle Ages falls short, for it con-
RELATIVISM AND ITS DISCONTENTS tributes litde to the "ladder oflove tradition" that interests Nussbaum-a
The historian William Reddy and the philosopher Martha Nussbaum, the tradition that attempts "to reform or educate erotic love so as to keep its cre-
two most important recent commentators on the emotions, dislike the rela- ative force while purifYing it of ambivalence and excess, and making it more
tivism that social constructionism implies. 62 If one cannot make judgments friendly to general social aims?' (Here Nussbaum has unfortunately not read
about emotions, if all emotions are created equal, then there is no room for the work of C. Stephen Jaeger.) Thus, while claiming that "one could write
advocacy. Without right or wrong, there can be no ethics, no basis for an illuminating history of moral thought from Plato to Nietzsche using that
change, and no critique. Reddy's and Nussbaum's objections are significant motif (of love's ladder] alone:' in fact Nussbaum brackets off and omits the
Middle Ages. 66 She sees the origins of "love's education" in the ancient
.,!
for the history of medieval emotion,s, but for two opposing reasons. Nuss- "
baum, a moral philosopher, largely skips the Middle Ages in her quest for a world and finds it again in the early modern period.
socially ameliorative form of love: she seeks an emotional life that goes be- With d1e exception of courdy love and the neo-Aristotelian philosophy
'I I

yond the self and leads to altruism, and here she finds the Middle Ages of St. Thomas, the Middle Ages fail, for Nussbaum, to provide a notion of '
I I
I'
!..
I
wanting. Reddy is not interested in the Middle Ages per se. But because he love that appreciates individuality, is respectful of human agency, and leads
proposes a theory of social transformation based on the nature of emotions, to compassion for the hungry, the grieving, and the persecuted. 67 In Nuss-
he points the way toward a new emotions history in which the Middle Ages baum's hands, St. Augustine becomes responsible for this blinkered view;
may potentially be integrated. Let us explore their briefs in turn. although (unlike the Stoics) he accepted-even celebrated-emotions, he
Nussbaum, who does not hesitate to call emotions "thoughts"-"up- also mistrusted them except insofar as their object was God. Dante, by con-
heavals of thoughts"-not only accepts but adds muscle to the cognitive trast, liberated love. Nussbaum's cutting-edge views of emotions are in this
view by finding it both cogent and potentially therapeutic. 63 If assessments way incorporated into a traditional view of history in which the Italian Ren-
are based on past experiences, then a childhood full of imaginative play and aissance is the dividing line between inadequate and full human awareness.
an adulthood full of art provide an incomparable repertoire of objects, im- William Reddy echoes Nussbaum in judging certain emotional stances as
ages, and responses for individuals to work with. Nevertheless, Nussbaum better than others.68 But he has a different agenda: he seeks not emotional
wishes to move beyond the cognitive stance. Recognizing that the new psy- desiderata but emotional liberation. Unhappy with both the moral rela-
chology does not lead to "normative questions:' she insists that "it -is right tivism of social constructionism, which argues that all societies are "created
to ask" these anyway, and she spends fully two-thirds of her book exploring equal" because there is no universal or essential truth, Reddy postulates that
whether "there is anything about emotions that makes them subversive of emotions "are the real world-anchor of signs?'69 By that he means, first, that
morality (or, in other ways, of human flourishing)?' 64 In fact, she finds the they exist; and second, that they talce the form that we know them in the
contrary: the right emotions are good. And because emotions are based on context of the signs-which depend on the cultures-that elicit them. For
assessments, they can be altered (and made better) by "altering our percep- Reddy, emotions have protean potential. But they are not expressed in pro-
tions of objects?'65 tean ways because, already in their expression, they have been shaped,
There are many "right" emotions, but love is the one for which Nuss- molded, and channeled rather thoroughly. Nevertheless- and this is the key
point-that molding is never entirely successful. Reddy malces this argu-

62. I am not the first to compare these two thinkers: see Jeremy D. Popkin's review of
Reddy's Navigation of Feeling in H-France Review 2 (November 2002), no. n8, WWW3 66. Ibid., p. 469.
.uakron.edujhfrancejvolzreviewsjpopkin4.html. 67. Nussbaum sums up the emotional desiderata as well as the importance of courtly love
63. Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought; on cognitivism's therapeutic potential, also see and Thomism; ibid., pp. 563-64; see also pp. 580-90.
eadem, The Therapy ofDesire: Theory and Practice in Hellenistic Ethics (Princeton, 1994). 68. I see no evidence that either scholar has read the other.
64. Nussbaum, Upheavals ofThought, pp. n-12. 69. William M. Reddy, ''Against Constructionism: The Historical Ethnography of Emo-
65. Ibid., p. 15. tions;' Current Anthropology 38 (1997): 331.

16 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 17


ment by coining the word "emotives?' These are "emotion talk and emo- habits-people suffer. Emotives are first drafts that press for reformulation,
tional gestures:' which "alter the states of the speakers from whom they de- but all too often second drafts are not permitted. Emotives are meant to
rive?'70 Emotional expressions are, for Reddy, analogous to "performatives:' allow people to navigate through life, following their goals, changing their
statements which, in certain contexts, have the ability to transform things or goals, if necessary. Indeed, "emotional liberty'' is precisely the liberty to
statuses. In the case of emotions, people's statements (e.g., "I am angry'') allow emotives free enough expression for the individual "to undergo con-
are attempts to describe feelings. At the same time, the words themselves version experiences and life-course changes involving numerous contrast-
change those feelings. "I am angry'' is, as it were, a "first draft:' trying out an ing, often incommensurable factors?' 74 "Emotional suffering" follows from
expression. It is necessarily inadequate, calling forth either its reinforcement this; one suffers as one sorts out the "incommensurable factors" that make
("Yes, I am furious") or its contradiction ("No, I am hurt, not angry'') or two dearly held goals incompatible. Some of this suffering is inevitable.
something in between. Even while revising the drafts, however, emotives Some of it, however, is induced by conventional emotives that are made
blank out the other possible interpretations of feelings; emotives are mandatory by a given "emotional regime?'
choices-automatic choices, for the most part-made from a huge reper- Because emotives are engines of conversion, they become important
tory of possibilities. Most of those possibilities will never be explored be- sources for historical change. Thus Reddy's book has a bipartite form, with
cause most are not recognized, or hardly recognized, by the society in which the first section a discussion of the psychological literature on emotions, the
an individual lives and feels. second a discussion of the causes and results of the French Revolution.
Reddy's view gets theoretical ballast from a particular variant of cognitive While the "emotional regime" of the eighteenth century was highly con-
theory pursued by Alice Isen and Gregory Andrade Diamond. Isen and Di- stricted, a politesse of the court in which emotions mattered not at all, there
amond stress emotions' automaticity. They argue that affect "can be under- were also "emotional refuges" in which the court's emotional values were
stood as a deeply ingrained, overlearned habit?' 71 For Reddy (as for Isen jettisoned. In the salons and popular novels, on the stage, and within affec-
and Diamond) this means that people can learn and unlearn feelings, al- tionate family circles, a new set of normative emotives was born, "sentimen-
though, as with any habit, such change is difficult. It also means that while talism:' which held that emotions were the purest and highest of human ex-
the habit remains comfortable, it crowds out other, nonautomatic re- pressions.75 Once the royal court was dismantled by the French Revolution,
sponses, which are possible but require "cognitive capacity:' an effort of will the emotional norms of the refuges became the new "regime?' Every act had
or at least of attention. n to be justified by "real feeling?' Policies had to come from natural passion,
This explains, for Reddy, why "conventional emotives authorized in a which was understood to be equivalent to natural morality. Anyone who
given community'' have "extensive power?'73 But such power is often dan- opposed such policies was, tl1erefore, evil. The Terror was unleashed to deal
gerous because it stifles the experimental nature of emotional expression. with the wicked, those whose hearts were insincere. But since (as we know
,,
li When emotives are forced to follow a few narrow channels-when, to put it from tl1e tl1eory of emotives) no emotion is pure and unchanging, the very
another way, emotional conventions allow for only a few overlearned premises and goals of sentimentalism were bound at every moment to show

70. Ibid., p. 327. This is Reddy's most capacious definition of emotives; at other times he
74. Reddy, Navigation of Feeling, p. 123. See also William M. Reddy, "Emotional Liberty:
does not mention gestures at all. See, for example, William M. Reddy, The Navigation ofFeel-
ing: A Framework for the History ofEmotions (Cambridge, 2001), p. w5: "Emotives are transla- Politics and History in the Anthropology of Emotions;' Cultural Anthropology 14 (1999):
tions into words about ... the ongoing translation tasks that currently occupy attention" (em- 256-88.
75. It is as ifReddy has turned Habermas's notion of the bourgeois public sphere-tl1e sa-
phasis mine).
71. Alice M. Isen and Gregory Andrade Diamond, ''Affect and Automaticity;' in Unin-
lons, theaters, and clubs in which private people exercised their reason and criticized public
tended Thought, ed. James S. Uleman and John A. Bargh (New York, 1989 ), p. 144. authority- into a realm of emotional experimentation. See Jiirgen Habermas, The Structural
Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of BoU1;geois Society, trans.
72. Ibid., p. 126.
73 Reddy, ''Against Constructionism;' p. 333
Thomas Burger (Cambridge, Mass., 1989), esp. chaps. 2 and 3

18 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 19


their weaknesses. PeoJ?le felt guilty about disagreeing with the Terror, and to others.78 What he does not say- but is nevertheless implicit in his work-
they felt guilty about their guilt. They felt fear for themselves and grief at is that the trajectory of Western history (at least the recent trajectory) is in
the execution of friends. In short, they experienced acute emotional suffer- the right direction. We begin with the court of Louis xrv, where emotional
life was entirely stifled. We continue with the emotional refuges of the salons
ing.
Under the pressures of this extreme discomfort, "Jacobin-style emotives" and Masonic lodges, where emotives were appreciated and cultivated. Nev-
were duly rejected, a reaction set in with the Directory, and sentimentalism ertheless, these refuges harbored a fatal flaw, which became evident once
ceased to defme the emotional regime. 76 The new political regime rejected they themselves attained the status of an "emotional regime": the erroneous
emotionality, elevating "masculine reason" in its place, while a variant of assumption that policies and morality could be based on "true" emotions.
sentimentalism found a role in art, literature, and intimate family life. But, The emotional suffering produced by this new regime gave way in turn to
unlike the emotional refuges of the past, the new ones allowed emotions to the romantic passions of the nineteenth century, which was also "wrong" in
be associated with weakness as well as strength. Released from the con- its separation of emotion from reason, but was, in any event, less painful and
straints of high-mindedness and moral goodness, emotives now had freer more open. This regime has more or less persisted until the present.
play in people's lives. The liberty wrought by the French Revolution was Making emotional suffering the agent for historical change is a hypothe-
emotional. sis full of hope, but it is problematic as a general theory. It discounts the
fundamental comfort of "deeply ingrained, overlearned habits;'' One of the
EMOTIONAL REGIMES / EMOTIONAL COMMUNITIES reasons that anthropologists have been reluctant to judge the emotional
Thus Reddy gives a scheme for historical change that does not rely on an tenor of the cultures that they study is because, on the whole, people adjust
ontogenic argument. It is not progressive restraint that leads to the modern to the cultural constraints that surround them and feel, if not happy, then at
world for Reddy but rather emotives and the emotional suffering that they least "at ease;'' Some suffer, to be sure. In the world of the Bedouins studied
entailed in the eighteenth century. Admittedly the emotional regime at the by LilaAbu-Lughod, for example, a man named Rashid made a fool ofhim-
royal court was highly restrained and controlling. But this did not create- selfby falling in love with his wife. But his very foolhardiness became a way
as Elias would have it-internalized superegos. Rather it led men and to reinforce the general norms among the members of his family: "his
women to seek emotional relief in refuges which, while imposing their own mother, brothers, and cousins criticized him as lacking in <agl [social good
norms and restraints, allowed for alternative forms of emotional expression. sense], and even the children, his nephews and nieces, all told me that they
Reddy suggests that this double-sided emotional life could not last because no longer feared him;'' 79 The children were not suffering; they were re-
the refuges pressed to remake the world in their image. "The lieved. One man's suffering can be (and often is) another's delight.
Revolution ... began as an effort to transform all of France, by means of Thus at the court of Louis XIV in 1692 the king wanted to arrange an ig-
benevolent gestures of reform, into a kind of emotional refuge;'' 77 Hence nominious marriage for his nephew the due de Chartres with one of his ille-
one emotional regime was replaced by another. But the new one turned out gitimate daughters. The young due, weak and speechless in front of the
to be even more painful than the first. Rejecting its constraints, the Direc- king, consented. His parents were humiliated; his mother burst into tears.
tory and the Napoleonic era created a new, more open emotional regime
even as it demoted emotions by opposing them to Reason. For Reddy, all
78. Ibid., p. 146: "If the theory of emotives is right, then sentimentalism's view bf human
emotional regimes are constraining, and people must search for the regime nature was wrong in interesting ways. (And in saying it was 'wrong' I am purposefully break-
most open to alternatives, experiment, failure, and deviance. ing with a relativist stance vis-a-vis the subject matter of my research.)"
Reddy is entirely straightforward in preferring some emotional regimes 79. Lila Abu-Lughod, Veiled Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society (Berkeley,
1986), p. 97. For Reddy's comments on Rashid and his wife, see Navigation ofFeeling, pp. 39-

76. Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling, p. 207. 40, 134-37, where he emphasizes the wife's suffering; she did not love Rashid and ran away

77- Ibid., P I47


from him.

20 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 21


At ditmer the young man's red eyes and his mother's welling tears did not eartl1; it was highly valued. And this literary theme had a lived counterpart,
discomfit the Icing at all. 80 "Far from disquieting the Icing:' Reddy observes, at least if the hairshirts and ascetic devotions in the lives of saints had any
"[the mother's] behavior appeared to suit him perfectly. He did not seek basis at all in practice. 87
mastery over her emotions. Submission of tl1e will, displayed tlwough a There are further difficulties, especially for medievalists. Reddy's scheme
minimal compliance with etiquette, was quite sufficient?'81 Thus is the postulates overarching "regimes" tl1at are quite clearly tied to state forma-
courtly "emotional regime" summed up in Reddy's scheme. But it may not tion and hegemony. He recognizes one set of emotives for tl1e royal court
be amiss to point out that some people-namely the Icing-got satisfaction and another set-a very different one-for emotional refuges. But the
from this anti-emotional regime. And what of the other courtiers standing refuges' emotives grew out of-and in this sense were created by-the
about?82 The anthropologist Renato Rosaldo described the agonized an- court's own emotive inadequacies. Although tl1e venues for such refuges
guish that the Ilongots of the Philippines felt when in 1972 martial law de- were legion- at theaters and clubs as well as in novels, to name a few- tl1e
clared a ban on their beloved practice of headhunting. 83 But presumably new emotives witl1in these refuges were all of one type: sentimentalism.
Ferdinand Marcos and the local Protestant ministers long opposed to the Reddy has taken an important step by recognizing the possibility of emo-
practice were very pleased that tl1e Ilongots generally complied. 84 Who suf- tional refuges. In much anthropological literature, there is one culture, one
fers, who delights, has a great deal to do with who is in power. An emo- emotional style for every society studied, though individuals are recognized
tional regime tl1at induces suffering in some does not induce it in all. to adapt to it in various ways. But Reddy's refuges leave us with a bipartite
Reddy's theory, too, may not talce into sufficient account the pride and society: either one is at court or one is in a sentimental refuge. It is possible,
honor that is associated, in some cultures, with suffering. The Paxturl tl1ough doubtful, that modern mass society yields just such limited alterna-
women whom Benedicte Grima studied in Pakistan during tl1e r98os were tives.
honored and admired precisely because they suffered, expressed their suffer- Certainly there is no reason to imagine that the Middle Ages- or even
ing, and were known by others to suffer. For them, "crying is the appropri- particular periods within the Middle Ages-was divided between just two
ate response to most events;'' 85 At her wedding, for example, the bride ar- possible emotional stances. Admittedly, we shall see in the course of this
rives with "downcast" eyes, in tears; she is called "beautiful" as she book some early medieval royal courts that fostered and privileged certain
"performs" her sadness with exquisite grace. 86 For many medieval Christian emotional styles. But it would be wrong to call them "regimes;'' Rather, tl1ey
writers, suffering was the imitatio Christi, tl1e imitation of Christ's life on seem to have represented the particular emotional styles of a momentarily
powerful fraction of the population, an elite faction. Although difficult to
glimpse, especially in the Early Middle Ages (when our sources are so mea-
So. Louis de Saint-Simon, Memoires complets et authentiques de Louis de Saint-Simon, ed.
ger), other sets of emotional norms no doubt coexisted with those that were
Adolphe Cheruel (Paris, 1965), 1:17-25.
dominant. This is why I argue in this book that there were (and are) various
Sr. Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling, p. 141.
S2. In fact, even the Icing pretended that the young man felt "passion" for the bride in ques-
"emotional communities" at any given time. Arlie Hochschild's discussion
tion (Saint-Simon,Memoires complets, p. 22), and Saint-Simon himself was interested precisely of the "managed heart'' of airline stewardesses is pertinent here. ss The
in the emotions at court. "hostesses" were trained, by order of the airlines, to deny their anger and
S3. Renato Rosaldo, Culture and Truth: The Remaking of Social Analysis, 2d ed. (Boston,
1993), pp.4-6. See also idem, Ilongot Headhunting: A Social History, 1883-1974 (Stanford,
19SO ), pp. 2Ss-S9. S7. This critique of Reddy was already raised in brief in Popkin's review of Navigation of
S4. Rosaldo shows that conversion to Christianity was one way the Ilongots assuaged their Feeling (p. 4). For Reddys reply, see H-France Review 2 (November 2002), no. II9,
pain. Headhunting had been an outlet for grief, and now Christianity became grief's refuge WWW3.uakron.edujhfrancejvohreviewsjreddy2.html (p. 1): "I define 'emotional suffering' as
(Ilongot Headhunting, pp. 2S5-S9 ). something unwanted. I would therefore exclude from tl1is category suffering that is em-
Ss. Benedicte Grima, The Peifbrmance of Emotion: "The Misfortunes Which Have Befallen braced by the sufferer?' On different valuations of suffering, see Esther Cohen, "The Ani-
Me" (Austin, 1992), p. 49 mated Pain of the Body;' AHR ros (2000): 36-6S.
S6. Ibid., p. s6. SS. Hochschild, Managed Heart.

22 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 23


disgust, instead behaving-and feeling- benevolently toward recalcitrant social community. But it is also possibly a "textual community:' created and
and drunken passengers. Alienated from their "true" emotions, these reinforced by ideologies, teachings, and common presuppositions.n With
women could hardly "reenter" the world of their friends and family without their very vocabulary, texts offer exemplars of emotions belittled and val-
a sense of phoniness or disgust at their "commercial" selves. Yet the world of orized. 93 In the Middle Ages, texts were memorized, made part of the self,
friends and family also managed emotions, which were shaped for purposes and "lived with" in a way analogous to communing with a friend.94 Ha-
of"social exchange" if not for financial profit. Thus one sees in airline stew- giography (the lives of saints) was written so that men and women would
ardesses an artificial but nevertheless perfectly coherent emotional commu- have models ofbehavior and attitude.95 The readers of these lives took that
nity that coexisted side by side with others. purpose seriously.
For Hochschild, it is wrenching to go from one emotional community to Thus emotional communities are in some ways what Foucault called a
another. 89 But this cannot be true for everyone. Anthropologists do it all the common "discourse": shared vocabularies and ways of thinking that have a
time, presumably enjoying the experience, which is indeed part of the very controlling function, a disciplining function. Emotional communities are
call of their profession. Renato Rosaldo described his initial perplexity at similar as well to Bourdieu's notion of "habitus": internalized norms that
headhunters who claimed that culling heads assuaged their sadness. Later determine how we think and act and that may be different in different
he understood and felt their complex intermingling of "bereavement, rage, groups. Some sociologists speak of "group styles:' in which "implicit, cul-
and headhunting"; he entered their emotional community. 9 0 Abu-Lughod turally patterned styles of membership filter collective representations" that
wrote that she would "miss" the emotional community afforded by her may include "vocabularies, symbols, or codes?'96 I use the term "communi-
bedouin hosts, "the joys of a sociable world in which people hug and talk ties" in order to stress the social and relational nature of emotions; to allow
and shout and laugh without fear of losing one another?' 91 Clearly Abu- room for Reddy's very useful notion of "emotives:' which change the dis-
Lughod's normal emotional surroundings were rather different. course and the habitus by their very existence; and to emphasize some
Imagine, then, a large circle within which are smaller circles, none en- people's adaptability to different sorts of emotional conventions as they
tirely concentric but rather distributed unevenly within the given space. The move from one group to another. 97
large circle is the overarching emotional community, tied together by fun-
damental assumptions, values, goals, feeling rules, and accepted modes of
expression. The smaller circles represent subordinate emotional communi- 92. For textual communities, see Brian Stock, The Implications of Literacy: Written Lan-

ties, partaking in the larger one and revealing its possibilities and its limita- guage and Models ofInterpretation in the Eleventh and Tivelfth Centuries (Princeton, N.J., 1983).
93. In d1e modern world, films and mass media do this as well. Thus Nussbaum finds it
tions. They too may be subdivided. At the same time, other large circles
useful to analyze a popular American film, Terms of Endearment, because it "appealed to a
may exist, either entirely isolated from or intersecting with the first at one mass audience in its own culture and elicited strong emotions from it'' (Upheavals ofThought,
or more points. p. 165). '.
'.
Whether overarching or subordinate, emotional communities are not 94. Reading partook of the process of "meditative imaging" discussed in Giselle de Nie,
coterminous with just any group. A crowded street does not constitute an "Images oflnvisible Dynamics: Self and Non-Self in Sixth-Century Saints' Lives;' Studia Pa-
:1.
' '
1.1'
I

emotional community. An emotional community is a group in which tristica 35 (2001): 52-64. l,r
95. There was litde "emotionology'' as such in the Middle Ages-there were few,. advice !
people have a common stake, interests, values, and goals. Thus it is often a
books (though exceptions, such as "mirrors of princes;' existed) and nothing written for a
broad "middle class" m1til rl1e very end of rl1e period. But the normative value of texts such as
89. But this is an assumption not borne out by much data. See the review ofHochschild's saints' lives, penitentials, and liturgical readings must not be overlooked as sources that
book byTheodore D. Kemper inAmerican]ournal of Sociology 90 (1985): 1368-71: ''Although shaped emotional conventions and norms as surely as family and neighborhood.
emotional estrangement is proposed often enough, there are few data to support such a con- 96. Nina Eliasoph and Paul Lichterman, "Culture in Interaction;' American Journal ofSoci-
clusion" (p. 1370 ). ology ro8 (2003): 735
90. Rosaldo, Culture and Truth, p. n. 97 On the importance of early medieval commm1ities-monks, laity and clergy, the imag-
91. Abu-Lughod, Veiled Sentiments, p. xiii. ined community of the living and dead, and so on- the bibliography is enormous. I cite here

24 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 25


"real" emotions, communicating them (at best) via a distorting "second
METHODS AND SOLUTIONS hand"? Then, too, do not genres dictate the "emotional tenor" that a text
Emotional communities are not constituted by one or two emotions but will have, quite independently from any supposed community? Finally, are
rather by constellations-or sets-of emotions. Their characteristic styles texts not full of topoi) repeated commonplaces derived from other places,.
depend not only on the emotions that they emphasize-and how and in sources, and eras? What can topoi tell us about real feeling?
what contexts they do so- but also by the ones that they demote to the tan- These are serious matters, but tl1ey are not insurmountable. Emotions
gential or do not recognize at all. To discover and analyze these communi- are always delivered "secondhand:' whether one adopts Reddy's notion of
ties I read related texts, noting all the words, gestures, and cries that signifY emotives or thinks simply of the ways in which one knows about feelings in
feelings-or the absence of feelings. I am interested in who is feeling what ordinary life: via gestures, bodily changes, words, exclamations, tears. None
(or is imagined to feel what), when, and why. Are there differences between of these things are the emotion; they are symptoms that must be inter-
men and women? I look for narratives within which feelings have a place, preted-both by the person feeling them and by observers.98 Texts provide
and I try to find common patterns within and across texts. I also seek im- one set of interpretations; the reader (or historian) studying them supplies
plicit theories-insofar as possible-of emotions, virtues, and vices (all of others. The psychoanalyst with a patient on the couch is not in a much
which are related in the Western tradition, as will become clear in the next different position, though of course she can interrogate the patient in ways
chapter). that historians can do only less directly with texts. Nevertl1eless, both histo-
Thus an important part of my method is to gather a dossier of materials rian and analyst depend on self-reportage, words, and silences.
(almost always written sources) that belong together because they point to The constraints of genre admittedly pose a problem. Might not the well-
an identifiable group, whether tied together by personal friendships, shared meaning historian mistal<:e a particular genre, with its tules of expression,
texts, or institutional affiliations. When I can fmd them -and when they are for an "emotional community''? I have tried to overcome this potential pit-
relevant to my group-I welcome on equal footing conciliar legislation, fall by drawing together different kinds of sources. Nevertheless, it is true
charters, hagiography, letters, histories, and chronicles. I set aside any iso- that some of the dossiers that I have been able to gather are ratl1er heavily
lated work, however interesting it may otherwise be. Always I miss what weighted toward a particular genre. This is no doubt largely the result of
historians would look at first in the modern period-diaries, memoirs, in- chance survival rather than the favoring by a community of one genre over
terviews- though it may well be that we wrongly think of these as accessing the other. (But if one genre were in fact privileged over others by a commu-
emotion better than other sources: it is our own emotional community that nity, this would strengthen my case, since it would suggest that emotional
values them for conveying intimate and sincere emotional expression. More communities choose the genres most compatible with their styles.) The
serious is the lack of materials reflecting the lower classes. The extant writ- rules of genre were not, however, ironclad. They themselves were "social
ings of the Early Middle Ages echo only the voices of the elites-and the products"-,- elaborated by people under certain conditions and with certain
clerical elites at that. goals in mind- and they could be drawn upon and manipulated with some
Written texts present numerous problems. To be sure, many may be freedom. Like Isen and Diamond's "automatic habits:' they shaped emo-
solved by the new and old auxiliary sciences of the historian- paleography, tional expression even as they themselves were used and bent so as to be
codicology, textual criticism, philology. But the historian of emotion is im- emotionally expressive. Thus, for example, we will see tl1at what wad a banal
mediately confronted with somewhat different and as yet largely unmet epitaph in one region was quite exceptional in another, that saints' lives
challenges. Already long ago we realized that our sources are "interested:'
often "insincere?' What should we make of them when they purport to tell 98. It is ttue that the James-Lange theoty and its variants argue that the bodily change is
us about emotions? Further, as composed texts, are they not very far from the emotion. But bodily changes still need to be interpreted, a process that relies on cogni-
tion and thus is subject to social shaping, misapprehension, denial, and all the other mecha-
one excellent recent synthesis: Regine Le Jan, La sociitt! du haut Moyen Age, VI'-IX' siecle nisms that mediate between an "emotion" and its naming. On the James-Lange themy see
(Paris, 2003 ). most conveniendy Cornelius, Science ofEmotion, chap. 3

26 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 2 7


written in the first half of the seventh century were markedly less emotional Like the "Dear" that we use today in formal letter salutations, even to
than those written later in the century, and that charters-the early medieval people we do not know-"Dear Sir or Madam"-topoi are conventions that
equivalent of legal documents-were not entirely determined by boiler- have largely lost their meaning. Or so they appear. Medieval writings are full
plate.99 of these expressions, which in part were meant to show off the writer's liter-
It is true that genres tend to have different uses for emotions. Presum- ary background and mastery of certain conventions. The sixth-century pan-
ably letters best reveal how a person "really'' feels. Saints' lives tell us how egyrist Venantius Fortunatus used the metaphor of sweetness (dulcedo) con-
people were supposed to behave, emphasizing emotional ideals. Sermons, tinually in his writings. To Ernst Curtius, writing half a century ago, this
too, emphasize "oughts?' Histories and chronicles, it would seem at first was seen as proof of his artificiality. 101 But what would be the use of the
glance, must be driven by their subject matter and thus pose special prob- metaphor if it had no meaning? 102 Fortunatus employed the phrase because
lems: if someone or some event is emotional, the historian has no choice it helped him win favor; when he wrote of the "sweetness" of one of his pa-
but to portray it thus. This, however, cannot be right, for the choice of sub- trons, he was drawing "attention to a characteristic which he had ulterior
ject and the way in which it is portrayed has everything to do with a histo- motives to applaud?'l03 Artificial sentiments-even the mollifYing "Dear
rian's emotional community and the ways in which he or she imagines her Sir"-tell us about conventions and habits; these have everything to do with
audience. But surely biblical exegesis is utterly subject driven; an exegete emotion, as Isen and Diamond have been at pains to point out. And even if
must deal with emotional passages because they come up, willy-nilly, in Isen and Diamond are wrong, insincerity tells us about how people are sup-
books of the bible. To be sure, we cannot then say that those passages express posed to feel. Fortunatus's patron was presumably made happy by the epi-
the exegete's emotional community. But if a hagiographer, homilist, or let- thet "sweet?' (That few men would be happy with it today tells us that our
ter writer quotes an emotional passage from the bible, then that is grist for own emotional community is quite different from Fortunatus's.) Today we
our mill, though it is important not just to "count" it as "emotional" but to send Hallmark cards. Is this an act of sincere emotion? It is hard to know;
know whether the passage is quoted with approval or censure and in what but one thing is certain: it tells us about prevailing emotional norms. For
context. the historian, this is precious enough.
That texts may be insincere, make things up, mislead, and even lie is pre-
cisely what the historian's craft is meant to confront. We no longer think THE SHAPE OF THIS BOOK
that texts are transparent windows onto "reality?' We would be wrong to This deliberately short book is in effect an extended essay and an invitation
drop this stance when it comes to emotions. In one of his saints' lives, the to others to add to the picture that it sketches. Each chapter raises a differ-
sixth-century bishop Gregory of Tours described a joyful baby. loo But no ent methodological problem in connection with studying emotional com-
one knows how a baby "really'' feels; and besides, this baby's joy was part of munities. It should be said at the outset that statistics is not among the
a miracle that Gregory was promoting. There is much to doubt in the ac- methods used. Though there are plenty of numbers and much counting of
count. But that Gregory imagined a child laughing with joy, that he found
this a convincing image, that he expected his audience to find it so as well: ror. Ernst Robert Curtius, European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages, trans. Willard R.
this we may say is probably true. Even if Gregory were deliberately lying, his Trask (New York, 1953), p. 412. The high value placed on sincerity in the modern world is in
lie would betray a truth, namely that in his day it was possible to imagine fact a historical phenomenon; Reddy argues persuasively that "sincerity must be ,considered a
happy babies. specialized skill ... that develops only in certain historical and political settings'' (Navigation

But perhaps happy babies were not part of Gregory's world but consti- ofFeeling, p.ro9).
102. Indeed, Massimo Montanari denies that topoi exist, for once they are properly contex-
tuted merely a topos that he knew about from his writing and education.
tualized, they take on various meanings; Montanari, "Domini e orsi nelle fonti agiografiche
dell'alto Medioevo;' in Il Bosco net medioevo, ed. Bruno Andreolli and Massimo Montanari
99. See chapter 2 for epitaphs, compare the emotional tenor of hagiography in chapters 5 (Bologna, 1988), p. 57 I thank Professor Montanari for sending me a copy of his article. i,
I

and 6, and consider the discussion of charters in chapter 6 below. 103. Peter Godman, Poets and Emperors: Frankish Politics and Carolingian Poetry (Oxford,
roo. Greg. Tur., VP 2.4, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 1j2, p. 22r. 1987), p. 16.

28 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 29


emotion words in this book, they are meant to serve as rough-and-ready ological questions, for it draws mainly on anonymous writings. How can
snapshots, not as proofs. Chapter r begins with the Western tradition of such writers constitute a social group, let alone an emotional community? I
emotion thought and emotion words, sketching the Latin legacy that argue that in this case they can and do, and that tl1eir emotional community,
would be transmitted directly to the Early Middle Ages. This chapter does that of the late seventh century, was quite different from any we had seen
not take up any emotional communities as such; indeed, it flattens out the before.
ancient world as if it were merely a repository of topoi) words, and ideas I end my study here, in the late seventh century. The eighth century was
about emotions ready to be drawn upon by future generations. No one in a "new world;' increasingly marked by Carolingian hegemony. The "epi-
the Early Middle Ages would embrace the entire legacy, which itself was the graphic habit;' which commemorated the dead and with which we begin
product of many different emotional communities. Rather, succeeding gen- the study of emotional communities in chapter 2, originated in its Christian
erations carefully, though no doubt unconsciously, drew upon various parts form at the end of the fourth century and petered out at the close of the sev-
of the ancient legacy-those most readily available and most consonant enth century.l 04 I take my cue from this rough-and-ready barometer. The
with their values and goals. next period-surely the eighth through early tenth centuries-deserves its
. Chapter 2 tal<:es up the possibility of studying coexisting emotional com- own book. The book's conclusion, then, reviews the arguments of the pre-
munities in different regions, suggesting that they might be connected to vious chapters, confronts some caveats, and proposes a theory of emotional
local traditions. Thus it looks at the funerary inscriptions of three different communities as agents of change. It is commonplace to see the modern pe-
Gallic cities and suggests that quite different emotional communities were riod as one of dramatic transformations, while the Middle Ages-especially
involved in each. Chapter 3 explores an emotional community through the the Early Middle Ages-is thought to have changed with glacial slowness.
writings of one person, Pope Gregory the Great (590-604). The method- But we shall see that, at least in the history of emotions, startling shifts took
ological problem here is to take one man's writings as reflection of a larger place within one or two generations. The history of emotions helps us to see
community: I consider Gregory's work to represent the assumptions and new dynamism in a historical period that seems otherwise largely stagnant.
norms of the clerical/monastic community for which he wrote and in which
he spent his days. 104. Mark A. Handley, Death> Society and Culture: Inscriptions and Epitaphs in Gaul and
Chapters 4, 5, and 6 turn to Francia; the triptych is meant to illustrate Spain> AD 300-750> BAR International Series II35 (Oxford, 2003 ), p. r2. Bmmie Effros, Caring
how and why different emotional commlmities may come to the fore and for Body and Soul: Burial and the Afterlift in the Merovingian World (University Park, Pa.,
2002), chap. 3, points out that, while rare, epigraphs nevertheless continued to be composed
then fade away. Again, each chapter poses a different methodological prob-
and engraved during the late seventh to mid-eighth century.
lem. Chapter 4 seeks to discover an emotional community from the writ-
ings of two friends, Gregory of Tours and Venantius Fortunatus (whom we
have just met). They were contemporaries of Gregory the Great, and their
community of feeling had much in common with the pope's. But, working
with the scheme of circles suggested above, we may say that their emotional
community intersected with but did not entirely track the boundaries of the
affective group in which Gregory lived. I argue that the emotional commu-
nity of the two friends was characteristic of the court at Metz, about which,
however, we know very little else. Chapter 5 finds a later, and very different,
emotional community at the Neustrian court ofClothar II and his heirs, for
which we have considerable evidence from a relatively wide variety of
sources. Here the methodological issue is to see commonalities across many
different genres by many different people, as well as to be sensitive to some
telling differences. Chapter 6 raises perhaps tl1e most harrowing method-
30 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Introduction { 3r
---------- ----~~------------------------------------------------------------.

located in the chest-was the site of"grief, fear, anxiety, hope, desire, love,
anger, joy, delight, and so on?' 1 (Later on, however, thumos would be asso-
ciated almost exclusively with anger.) The kardia (heart), too, was "involved
in anger, courage, fear, joy, pain, and patience?' In later poets the heart was
explicitly treated as the locus of hope and love. 2 For Homer psuche was a
"shade;' not part of a living person at all, but later poets understood it as an
interior entity. In Aeschylus (d. 456 B.C.E.) it was linked to pleasure, hedone. 3
In the plays of Sophocles (d. 406 B.C.E.), psuche, the "soul;' was where
Far from being utterly different from our own, the emotions of the ancient anger, courage, grief, joy, and other emotions rose and ebbed. 4
and early medieval worlds were recognizable antecedents of the modern va- None of this was systematized. Shirley Darcus Sullivan, a modern com-
riety. The capacious category "emotions" that exists today in both popular mentator trying to make sense of Greek psychology as it emerges from the
and learned thought in the Anglophone world had recognizable counter- literary sources, uses terms like "sharing'' and "partaking'' to talk about the
parts in the ancient and late antique worlds. Then too, the contents of our relationship between thumos and emotions. Nor was there a "theory'' of
idea of the emotions-words such as fear, love, hate, and gestures such as emotions as yet, though implicitly tl1e poets linked emotions to madness
weeping- had their parallels in the Greek and Roman past. The two princi- and thus to a hydraulic scheme; emotions were forces out of rational con-
pal ways in which we conceive of emotions-as impulses needing to be trol.5
tamped down or as rational assessments-are of extraordinarily long stand- This idea was made explicit in Plato (d.? 347 B.C.E.). He spoke ofpathos,
ing. And the modern disjunctive valuation of emotions-as inimical or as which meant for him more or less what "emotion" means to an Anglo-
essential to the good life-was also rehearsed in the ancient world. phone.6 Plato did not like emotions very much: in the Phaedo Socrates dis-
This world was filled with its own emotional communities, but this misses his wife, Xanthippe, when she bursts into tears at the prospect of his
chapter is not concerned with them. Its purpose, rather, is to suggest in out- execution, and he chides Apollodorus, who weeps as well, for his "woman-
line the legacy of emotion concepts and words that antiquity offered to the
medieval world. Its main points may be summarized briefly: Aristotle con- r. Caroline P. Caswell,A Study of"Thumos)) in Early Greek Epic (Leiden, 1990), p. 34. For
sidered emotions useful, but the Stoics determined to extirpate them. Cer- fiJrther studies of Homeric emotions, see Robert Zaborowski, La crainte et le courage dans
tain groups of Christians adhered to the Stoic view, incorporating emotions a
Plliade et l'Odyssee. Contribution lexicographique la psychologie homirique des sentiments (War-
saw, 2002), with further bibliography on pp. 35-38. See also Shirley Darcus Sullivan, Psycho-
into a notion of"vices?' Chief an10ng these groups was the Desert Fathers, a
logical and Ethical Ideas: What Early Greeks Say (Leiden, 1995), p. 38; eadem, Sophocles' Use of
subset of patristic writers who fled normal human society; spent their days
Psychological Terminology: Old and N eJV (Ottawa, 1999 ), pp. 29-35. I thank Catherine Mardikes
in prayer, fasting, and penance; and taught their disciples to follow their
and Richard Kraut for help in gathering a bibliography on emotions in the Greek world.
lead. More mainstream Christian Fathers, such as Saint Augustine, were 2. Sullivan, Sophocles' Use, p. 144. On both kardia and thumos see Hayden Pelliccia, Mind,
enormously influenced by these ascetics. While welcoming some emotions Body, and Speech in Homer and Pindar (Gottingen, 1995), with extensive bibliography. Pellic-
under some circumstances, and certainly unable to do without them when cia's work (esp. pp. 15-27) suggests that scholarly approaches to Greek psychology have until
describing human beings and their foibles, patristic writers nevertheless recently been affected by the same "evolutionary" assumptions as those of medieval histori-
often identified emotions with sins. Later emotional communities drawing ans.

upon tl1ese ideas had to deal with the resulting ambivalence. 3 Shirley Darcus Sullivan, Aeschylus' Use of Psychological Terminology: Traditional and New
(Montreal, 1997), p. 149.
4. Sullivan, Sophocles' Use, pp. 172-75.
5 Ibid., p. 211.
"CLASSICAL" EMOTIONS 6. Harris, Restraining Rage, pp. 84-85, says tl1at pathos means "something close to 'emo-
In Homer, places in tl1e mind and body were said to contain the sorts of tion'" first in Plato's Phaedrus; Aristotle's use of tl1e plural, pathe, may have been itself inno-
things that we associate with emotions. The "inner wind" of thumos-often vative.

The A1fcient Legctcy { 33


ish" behavior.7 But Plato's distaste for the display of emotions did not pre- replete with the emotions, is below the neck. This mortal soul is bipartite:
vent his talking about them, most notably in the Philebus and the Timaeus nearest the head is the "better part:' the heart, filled with the emotions of
(two late dialogues) as well as the Republic and thePhaedrus.s manliness (andreia) and anger (thumos). Its emotions are warlike and, un-
The Philebus provides the briefest account and may serve to introduce like other emotions, are potential allies of reason. Below the heart is the sec-
most of Plato's key terms. Here Socrates makes an unusual appearance (he is ond, lesser part, the liver, full of the desires (epithumiai) and appetites. This
rare in the late dialogues) to debate the role of pleasure in the life of the anatomy has a specificity lacking in the poets. Plato is drawing on medical
mind.9 He observes that pleasure (hedone) and pain (lupe) are usually mixed literature. 13 (Later the scheme would be expressed as an unholy trinity: the
together. When the soul (psuche) feels anger, fear, yearning, mourning, love, liver as the container for the concupiscent or desiderative part of the soul;
jealousy and envy, it feels sweet pleasure even as it suffers pains. "You re- the heart as the irascible or spirited part; the brain as the site of reason.)
member:' says Socrates, "how people enjoy weeping at tragedies?' Let us Plato's theory was dynamic and confrontational. The appetites were wild
note that Plato here brings up weeping, quite unselfconsciously, as part of beasts; reason, the lion tamer. Reason's whip was anger, which rose at its be-
his theory of the emotions. Our connection of that gesture/bodily sign to hest to restrain the other emotions. Despite its role as the container of the
feelings is not just a modern construct. baser passions, the liver, thick and smooth, was also reason's ally. When it
The argument is brief in the Philebus, for Socrates refuses to stay up late learned what was going on in the mind, it struck "terror into the appetitive
to explain how each of the emotions is an admixture of pain and pleasure. 10 part:' inducing nausea and pain. There was thus a close connection for Plato
He wants to get on to the really important issue: how contemplation of the between "soulful" desires like jealousy (zelos) and bodily appetites such as
forms is wholly pleasurable. Again, in the Timaeus Plato makes very clear hunger and thirst: his example of self-restraint giving way to excess was the
that the emotions are problematic.l 1 Here he presents a creation story in desire (epithumia) for food: "if [that desire] prevails over the higher reason
which God's children heedlessly gave "dread and inevitable" emotions and the other desires, it is called gluttony [gastrimat;gia ]?'14
(pathemata) to morals. Here Plato assimilates the emotions to what will Aristotle (d. 322 B.C.E.) proposed a fundamentally different theory of
later be called the vices. He damns pleasure as "the strongest allurement of emotions. For him the pathe (he used the plural form of pathos) were ra-
evil:' while pain frightens "good things away?' We are in a keenly moral uni- tional. They depended on conviction and resulted from judgments about
verse now. In the soul, all the emotions-anger, fear, confidence, hope, and phantasia, things hoped for or remembered. 15 Emotions were cognitive re-
love-mingle together in "reasonless sensation?' 12 sponses to lived experience in the world. Indeed, modern cognitive psy-
The immortal part of the soul, for Plato, is in the head; the mortal part, chologists admit their debt to Aristotle. 16 The topic ofpathe came up for Ar-
istotle largely in the context of his work on rhetoric rather than ethics: he
wanted to explain to tl1e advocate how to play on the emotions of a jury. It
7 Plato, Phacdo 6oa and n7d, trans. Harold N. Fowler, Loeb Classical Library (Cam-
bridge, Mass., 1966), pp. 208-9, 400-401. Helene Monsacre points out that the association
between women and tears found in Plato was a late development in the Greek world; Mon- 13. As noted by Galen, On the Doctrines of Hippocrates and Plato, ed. ar1d trans. Phillip de
sacre, Les larmes d'Achille. Le heros, la femme et la souffrance dans la poisie d'Homere (Paris, Lacy (Berlin, 1980-84), p. 361. In the view of Mario Vegetti, La medicina in Platone (Venice,
1984), esp. pp. 137-38. In the Iliad the heroes wept regularly-above all from grief and fear. 1995), p. xiii, the Timacus drew above all on Italian ar1d Siciliar1 medical teaching.
8. Plato devalues emotions and looks to reason to conquer them; Republic 3.6 (6o4b- 14. Plato, Phacdrus 238a-b, trans. Harold N. Fowler, Loeb Classical Library (Can1bridge,
6o6e), trar1s. Paul Shorey, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), pp. 454-63. Mass., 1982), P447
9. Plato, Philebus 47d-48d, trans. Harold N. Fowler, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, 15. On things hoped for or remembered, Aristotle, The '~rt" ofRhetoric r.n.6 (1370a), trans.
Mass., 1942), pp. 330-33. John Hemy Freese, Loeb Classical Library (London, 1926), pp. n6-17. For thumos as tl1e
ro. Ibid., sod, pp. 340-41. source of many emotions (e.g., anger, courage, affection) in Aristotle, see Cristina Viano,
n. Plato, Timacus 69c-71b, in The Timacus ofPlato, ed. and trans. R. D. Archer-Hind (Lon- "Competitive Emotions ar1d Thumos in Aristotle's Rhetoric," in Envy, Spite and Jealousy: The
don, 1888), pp. 257-65. Rivalrous Emotions in Ancient Greece, ed. David Konstan and N. Keitl1 Rutter, Edinburgh Lev-
12. Harris, Restraining Rage, pp. 170-71 dates the opposition between reason and ar1ger to entis Studies 2 (Edinburgh, 2003), pp. 85-97.
the period around the start of the Peloponnesian war. r6. Cornelius, Science ofEmotions, p. ns.

34 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages TheAncientLegacy { 35


was necessary to take stock of the emotions that might get in the way of- or tion-its ethical valence-had to do with how socially appropriate it was.
be conducive to- a favorable judgment. Aristotle named fourteen pertinent The more normative, tl1e better. 24
emotions: anger (orge) and; its opposite, mildness (praotes); love (philia) and Let us sum up. The ancient Greek world recognized emotions, and the
hate (misos); fear (phobos) and its opposite, confidence (tharrein); shame words tl1at Greek writers used for specific emotions are not entirely unfa-
(aischune) and shamelessness (anaischuntia); benevolence (charis) and lack miliar to us today in their modern vernacular equivalents. 25 Already by
of benevolence (acharistia); pity (eleos) and indignation (nemesan); and Plato's day tl1e word pathos meant more or less what we mean by an emo-
tion. (And it is important to realize that there is no firm consensus even
lastly, envy (phthonos) and desire to emulate (zelos)P
While admitting, like Plato, that emotions were amalgams of pleasure today about what we mean, as will become clear by the end of this chapter.)
and pain, Aristotle tended to put the emphasis on pain (lupe). Pity, for ex- Both Plato and Aristotle had theories of emotions that were not entirely dis-
ample was "a kind of pain excited by the sight of evil, deadly or painful, similar from modern notions. Plato's theory resembled the hydraulic
which befalls one who does not deserve it?' 18 Envy was "a kind of pain at the model; Aristotle's the cognitive. Finally, both mentioned examples of
sight of [someone else's] good fortune:' 19 while tl1e desire to emulate (zelos) pathosjpathe that figure (in English equivalents) on modern psychologists'
was a "pain not due to the fact that another possesses [highly valued goods] lists of emotions. To be sure, what Plato and Aristotle meant by "orge" in
but to the fact that we ourselves do not?'20 The exception was anger, which tl1eir slave-owning, male-dominated society was quite different from what
was "always accompanied by a certain pleasure [hedone], due to the hope of we mean by "anger" in our society of mass consumers and special interest
groups. But nothing of the past is the same today. That's why we have his-
revenge to come?'2l
Far more important to Aristotle than feelings, whether pleasurable or torians.
painful, were the people who were feeling and the social situations that pro-
THE STOICS
voked tl1em. Indeed, Aristotle was interested in a sociology of emotion,
played out in the context of a highly competitive and abrasive society in The Stoics, whose school of philosophy was at its height around the time of
which men were acutely aware of their status and honor. 22 This explains his Chrysippus (d. ea. 206 B.C.E.), put together the theoretical legacies of Plato
long discourse on the many slights, dishonors, and insults to a man's supe-
rior rank that might evoke wrath. 23 The goodness or badness of an emo-
where he surveyed the pathe only to dismiss m em as largely irrelevant to virtue (arete); see Ar-
istotle, The Nicomachean Ethics 2.5 (no6a), trans. H. Rackham, Loeb Classical Libraty (Cam-
bridge, Mass., 1932), pp. 88-89. Here, Aristotle's list of emotions, admittedly open-ended,
17. Aristotle, Rhetoric 2.p-2.rr.7 (r38oa-88b), pp. 184-247.
consisted of eleven words, some different from mose in me Rhetoric, since me needs of the
r8. Ibid., 2.8.2 (r385b), p. 225.
forensic orator were no longer at issue: desire (epithumia), anger (01;ge), fear (phobos), confi-
!9. Ibid., 2.IO.I (I387b), P 239
dence (thrasos), envy (phthonos), joy (chara), love (philia), hate (misos), yearning (pothos), jeal-
20. Ibid., 2.n.r (r388a), p. 243.
ousy/desire to emulate (zews), and pity (eleos).
2!. Ibid., 2:2.2 (I378b), p. IJ3.
24. Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics 2.6.ro-r2 (no6b), p. 93: "one can be frightened or bold,
22. For a tl1orough discussion of Aristotle's terms and meir significance in me Greek
feel desire or anger or pity, and experience pleasure and pain in general, eimer too much or
world, see David Konstan, The Emotions of the Ancient Greeks: Studies in Aristotle and Classical
too little, and in bom cases wrongly; whereas to feel mese feelings at me right time, on me
Literature (Toronto, forilicoming). I am very grateful to Professor Konstan for sending me
right occasion, towards me right people, for the right purpose and in me right mariner, is to
me typescript of tlUs study before publication.
feel me best amount of mem, which is me mean amount-and me best amount is of course
23. Aristotle, Rhetoric 2.2.3-2.2.7 (I378b-79a), pp. !74-77- On the relationship between me
tl1e mark of virtue?' The thrust of mis statement is not mat moderate emotions are best but
"rough-and-tumble context of Aristotle's Amens" and me emotions he discusses, see David
ramer "mat emotions (whemer weak or strong) should be emically appropriate to the spe-
Konstan, ''Aristotle on Anger and me Emotions: The Strategies of Status;' in Ancient Anger:
cific situation;' as noted in The Passions in Roman Thought and Literature, ed. Susanna Mar-
Perspectives from Homer to Galen, ed. Susanna Braund and Glenn W. Most, Yale Classical Stud-
ies, vol. 32 (Cambridge, 2003), 99-120, wim "rough-and-tumble" at p. n7. Nevermeless, a ton Braund and Christopher Gill (Cambridge, 1997), p. 7
25. On mis point for rancorous words in particular, see Harris, Restraining Rage, chap. 3
, man's disposition, age, and condition determined when and to what extent he was moved by
me pathe. The importance of disposition was Aristotle's main point in the Nicomachean Ethics, and Konstan, Emotions of the Ancient Greeks.

The Ancient Legacy { 37


36 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
and Aristotle. They agreed with Aristotle that emotions were judgments. TABLE r. The Stoic Emotional Grid
But in their view, they were bad judgments. In this way, they agreed with
Assessed as a good Assessed as an evil
Plato: emotions were inimical to the virtuous life.
Present pleasure (hedone, laetitia, voluptas) pain (lupe, aegritudo)
It is wrong to assume a unanimous Stoic position on tl1e emotions. Nev-
Future desire (epithumia, libido, appetitus, cupiditas) fear (phobos, metus)
ertl1eless, their views may be fairly pulled together for our purposes here.
They conceived of emotions as consisting of two judgments: an appraisal of
something as being good or bad, and an assessment of the appropriate way
The Stoics were convinced that the wise man (or woman) was unswayed
to react. 26 They argued that all emotions fell within four categories on a grid
by passion, and therefore they considered such lists of emotion words im-
that considered both the present and the future. The two emotions of the
portant tools for reason to wield as it convinced judgment not to assent to
present were pleasure and pain; those of tl1e future were desire and fear (see
emotion. The process began with a pre-emotion, which intimated that an
table r). Pleasure (hedone in Greek; laetitia and voluptas in Latin) was a judg-
emotion was on its way. These were the "first movements;' manifesting
ment that something good was present and that it was appropriate to feel
themselves as pallor, weeping, shuddering, or an expansion or contraction
(in reaction) a kind of bodily expansion. Pain (lupe; aegritudo) was a judg-
of the chest. For the Stoics these were not emotions themselves but rather
ment that something bad was present and that it was appropriate to feel a
signals that something had the appearance of being good or bad. You
sort of sinking. Fear (phobos; metus) was the judgment that something bad
should then exercise your judgment to realize that the appearance was false,
was imminent and that it was appropriate to avoid it. Desire (epithumia; li-
avoiding the emotion itsel In this way, you circumvented both judgments
bido, appetitus, or cupiditas) was the assessment that something good was im-
involved in emotion: the assent to anything external being good or bad as
minent and that it was appropriate to reach for it.27
well as the assent to the bodily reactions that were appropriate to the emo-
Within this grid fell every sort of emotion. Expounding on the Stoic
pathe (which he translated into Latin as perturbationes) in his Tusculan Dis- tions.
Thus in the ancient world the Stoics proposed a coherent theory of the
putations, the Roman writer and politician Cicero (d. 4-3 B.C.E) named many
emotions, a plan for their management, and an open-ended list of words
of them, tl1ough his list was meant to be open-ended. 28 Because these Latin
that alerted reason to vigilant action.
terms constituted a major part of the repertory of emotion words that Cic-
ero himself lmew, and because they remained an important subset of the
LATE ANTIQUE WORDS AND THEORIES
possible emotion words that medieval people might use, I present them
Cicero presented himself primarily as a translator and admiring critic of the
here in alphabetical order in table 2.
Stoic position. 29 About a century later the Roman philosopher and states-
man Seneca (d. 65 C. E.) modified the theory by elaborating on tl1e idea of
26. For what follows I have consulted, among other studies, Marcia L. Colish, The Stoic "first movements?' He introduced the will (voluntas) into the psychological
Tradition from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages, vol. 1: Stoicism in Classical Latin Literature, mix, making it the part of reason that assented to the "movement" and
rev. ed. (Leiden, 1990 ); Nussbaum, Therapy of Desire; Richard Newhauser, The Treatise on
transformed it into an emotion. 30 Seneca used affectus as his term of art for
Vices and Virtues in Latin and the Vernacular (Turnhout, 1993); Simo Knuuttila, "Medieval
Theories of the Passions of the Soul;' in Emotions and Choice from Boethius to Descartes, ed.
the emotions. He was particularly interested in anger (ira), which he
Henrik Lagerlund and Mikko Yrji:insuuri (Dordrecht, 2002), pp. 49-83; and especially Rich- termed not only an emotion but a vice (vitium). Other affectus that he men-
ard Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind: From Stoic Agitation to Christian Temptation. The Gif
ford Lectures (Oxford, 2000 ). 29. On the context for Cicero's writing on the topic, see Cicero on the Emotions: Tusculan
27. See Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, pp. 29-30; I have added voluptas to Sorabji's list Disputations 3 and 4, trans. Margaret Graver (Chicago, 2002 ), pp. xii-xv.
of Latin terms for pleasure because it is used in place of laetitia in Cicero, Tusculan Disputa- 30. See Brad Inwood, "Seneca a11d Psychological Dualism;' in Passions and Perceptions:
tions 4.7.16, trailS. J. E. King, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, Mass., 1945), p. 344. Studies in Hellenistic Philosophy ofMind. Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium Hellenisticum, ed.
28. Ibid., 4.7.16-4.922, pp. 344-50 makes clear that Cicero is not na~ning every emotion Jacques Brunschwig a11d Martha C. Nussbaum (Cambridge, 1993), esp. pp. 173-81; Sorabji,
but rather pertinent exa!llples. Emotion and Peace ofMind, pp. 69-70.

38} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages TheAncientLrgacy { 39


tioned in passing included libido (lust or desire), metus (fear), audacia (reck-
TABLE 2 . Cicero)s List of Stoic Emotions and Approximate English
lessness), amor (love), and odium (hate). 31 He thought that some people-
Equivalents
"hotter" people-were more liable to anger than others; this was playing on
adfiictatio, affliction lamentatio, lamenting, mourning the medical humoral theories of the day. 32 But even Galen (d. ea. 200 C.E.),
adfiictari, to be miserable or lamentari, to lament himself a doctor, sought the remedy for emotions less in physical therapy
afflicted libido, desire than through education and exercises in mental self-control with a good
aegritudo, pain, distress luctus, grief tutor. 33
aemulatio) rivalry lugere, to grieve None of these philosophers made up emotion words; they found them
aemulari, to rival maeror, sorrow in the popular and learned vocabulary of their day. Like modern psycholo-
aerumna, weariness maerere, to sorrow gists (as we shall see), they were concerned to schematize them, and, again
angor, anxiety malevolentia, malice, spite like modern psychologists, they were particularly interested in a few key
angi, to be vexed metus, fear, dread emotions: anger seems to have been-and to some extent remains-a sort
commotio animi, strong emotion misericordia, pity of benchmark for all the others. 34
conturbatio, agitation misereri, to pity The triumph of Christianity did not change the words used for emo-
cupiditas, desire molestia, annoyance tions, but it altered their meanings. Christian values and goals overturned
delectatio, pleasure obtrectatio, jealousy old norms: bold acts became the practices of ascetics, not martial heroes;
desiderium, desire, longing obtrectare, to be jealous the moral elite became the "converted:' not the well educated; virtue be-
desperatio, despair odium, hatred came a matter of humility, not manliness. Or, rather, the ascetics became the
desperare, to despair pavor, panic "athletes of God"; the converted knew the only truth; and manliness was re-
discordia, discord perturbatio, emotion defined in Christian terms. Consider St. Augustine's jaundiced view of his
dolor, sorrow pigritia, indolence, sloth father's "old-fashioned" values: when the older man scrimped to pay for his
dolere, to sorrow pudor, shame boy's education, Augustine complained: "Yet this very same father didn't
elatio animi, elated emotion sollicitudo, worry care how I grew with regard to You or how chaste I was?' 35 And when the
exanimatio, paralyzing terror sollicitari, to worry
excandescentia, heatedness (of anger) spes, hope
formido, dread terror, terror 31. Seneca, On Anger r.r.1, r.r.s, 1.3.6, 1.7.1, trans. John W. Basore, Loeb Classical Library
timor, fright (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), pp. ro6, ro8, n4, 124. For a penetrating study of affectus, to which
gaudium, joy
my own work is beholden, see Dan1ien Boquet, IJordre de I'affect au Moyen Age. Autour de
indigentia, need, greed voluptas, pleasure
l'anthropowgie affective d'Aelred de Rievaulx (Caen, 2005), with a discussion of Seneca on
inimicitia, enmity [emotion markers: pp.43-46.
invidentia, envying dentium crepitus, chattering of teeth 32. Seneca, On Anger 2.19.2-5, pp. 204-6.
invidere, to envy from fear 33. Galen, On the Passions and Errors ofthe Soul, trans. Paul W. Harkins ([Columbus, Ohio],
invidia, envy; spite pallor, whitening from fear 1963).
ira, anger 34 See Janine Fillion-Lahille, Le De ira de St!neque et la phiwsophie stoi'cienne des passions
rubor, blushing from shame
jactatio, ostentation (Paris, 1984); Julia Annas, "Epicurean Emotions:' Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 30
tremor, trembling from fear]
laetitia, happiness (1989): 145-64; Nussbaum, Therapy of Desire, p.404 n. 1; Galen's On the Passions is.largely
about anger; for Lactantius, see below at note 38. Modern studies include Steams and
Steams, Anger; Carol Tavris, Anger: The Misunderstood Emotion (rev. ed.; New York, 1989 ).
Note: I provide here generic and simple English eqnivalents, taking into account the
35. Augustine, Conftssions 2.3.5, ed. Pierre de Labriolle, Les Belles Lettres, 2 vols. (Paris,
translations in Cicero on the Emotions: Tusculan Disputations 3 and 4, trans. and with
1969, 1977), 1:33: "cum interea non satageret idem pater, qualis crescerem tibi aut quam cas-
commentary by Margaret Graver (Chicago, 2002). Noun terms are from Cicero,
tus essem?'
Tusculan Disputations 4.s.ro-4.9.22 and 4.37.80 (for spes [hope]); verbs are from 3:34.83-
84; emotion markers are ibid., 4.8.19. Cicero found nouns more comfortable than verbs The Ancient Legacy { 41
to refer to emotions, and it is striking that nouns are today the most characteristic way
in which English speakers think theoretically of emotion words. See Phillip Shaver et al.,
"Emotion Knowledge: Further Exploration of a Prototype Approach," Journal of
Personality and Social Psychowgy 52 (1987): ro61-86.
father, viewing his pubescent son at the baths, thought about grandchil- Jerome (d. ea. 4-20) was an ascetic close to the Desert Fatl1ers. But when
dren, Augustine accused him of reveling in self-will, "loving your creature in he set about to translate the bible into Latin-the so-called Vulgate-he had
place ofYou.'' 36 perforce to describe the behaviors of numerous people who clung to "the
As Christians deliberately turned pagan definitions of good and evil up- world" because that was how he found tl1em in tl1e Hebrew and Greek
side down, old emotional habits had to change. Parenting, education, and texts. Thus he drew on the vocabulary at hand. He never intended to pro-
the availability of hallowed models-first of the martyrs and later of the vide an inventory of emotion words, but we shall use him for that purpose
saints-helped make this transformation possible. Christ's kingdom was here, in order to supplement tl1e list from Cicero and thus to give a partial
not of this world: that essential fact was absorbed in different ways by sense of the vocabulary that was available to the Early Middle Ages. A sys-
different groups. But one thing is certain: Christianity had the potential to tematic survey would include far more than Jerome's Vulgate: it would, at
effect seismic shifts in the emotions that were valued ,or disdained as well as the least, incorporate the emotion words of other biblical translations of the
the norms of their expression. time, the so-called Vetus Latina. It would look, too, at the words incorpo-
Within this changed landscape, the outlines of two different tendencies rated into Christian liturgical rites and the vocabularies of homilies, which
may be seen: on the one hand were Christians who tentatively welcomed referred, perforce, to the daily lives, values, and feelings of people in the
the ancient world's rich emotional vocabulary and its implications for feel- world.
ing; on the other hand were tl1ose who rejected a great many emotions. (No Here Jerome must suffice. It is telling that he employed only forty-six of
one could reject emotions entirely. Even the Stoics had countenanced eu- Cicero's sixty emotion words. 40 Jerome, like Cicero, belonged to-and
patheiai-a very few "good" emotions which, however, only the "wise man" wrote for-an emotional community, privileging certain emotions over
experienced.) 37 Lactantius and Jerome may serve here as representatives of others. He also added to Cicero's list. How do we lmow that such "new
the first group, the Desert Fathers of the second. words" connoted emotions? Because they come up as pairs with-or trans-
Lactantius (d. ea. 330 ), a Christian rhetorician and tutor to tl1e son of formations of-the terms of affect that we already know to have been con-
Emperor Constantine I, argued the usefulness of emotions, making the sidered as such.
point by taking on the tricky topic of the emotions of God. God gets angry Thus in Jerome's rendition of tl1e bible, Elcana was sad (tristis) because
(irascitur) and hates (odit) tl1e wicked, Lactantius argued. It is tme that God he loved (diligebat) his barren wife Anna, while she, who was bitter in heart
is free of emotions such as lust (libido), fear (timor), covetousness (avaritia), (amaro animo), prayed to the Lord with many tears (jlens lawiter) (r Sam.
grief (maeror), and envy (invidia). 38 But, Lactantius argued, He is full of joy r:s-ro). Here love-which, as we saw with Lactantius, was associated with
and love, hate and anger. Thus we find in Lactantius the verbs diligo and the emotions-was linked to sorrow, and Anna's unhappiness was proved
amo (both meaning to love) and the nouns caritas (love) and laetitia (happi- by tears. Similarly associated with weeping is lamentatio: "Let them hasten
ness) pared with odi (to hate), because God's happiness and love for the and take up a lamentation for us; let our eyes shed tears [lacrimas]" (Jer.
good turned on hating and being angry at the wicked. 39
ibid., 15.6, p. 166. For more discussion ofLactantius's contribution to incorporating the emo-
36. Augustine, Confossions 2.3.6, 1:33: "creaturam tuam pro te amavit?' tions into the Christian life and world view, see David Konstan, Pity Transformed (London,
37. See Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, pp. 47-SI. 2oo1), pp. 121-24.
38. Lactantius, On the Anger ofGod 16.7, in Lactance, La colere de dieu, ed. Christiane Ingre- 40. The words not included in the Vulgate are adjlictatiojadflictari; aegritudo; aligorjangi
meau, SC 289 (Paris, 1982), p. 170. (though anxius is much used); conturbatio as mental agitation; exanimatio; excandescentia (a
39 Lactantius, On the Anger of God 4.ro-n, p. ro6: "Ita qui bonos diligit, et malos odit, et word, in any case, made up by Cicero to mean "nascent anger"; see Hanis, Restraining Rage,
qui malos non odit, nee bonos diligit, quia et diligere bonos ex odio malomm venit et malos pp. 68-69); invidentia; malevolentia; obtrectatiojobtrectare; dentium crepitus; and rubor (in the
odisse ex bonorum caritate discendit. Nemo est qui amet vitam sine odio mortis;' (For he sense of blushing). To do these word searches, I used the on-line searchable Douay-Rheims
who loves the good also hates the bad, and he who does not hate the bad also does not love Vulgate text at http://www.lib. uchicago.edujefts/ARTFL/publicjbiblesjvulgate.search.html,
the good. For loving the good comes from hating the bad, and hating the bad derives from verifying the passages in the critical edition Biblia Sacra inxta vulgatam versionem, ed. Robert
love of the good. There is no one who loves life without hating death.) For God's joy, see Weber, 2 vols. (Stuttgart, 1969 ).

42 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages TheAncientLegacy { 43


9:18).41 And "a voice was heard on high of lamentation [lamentationis], of rather that God's fury (furor) and jealousy (zelus) will be ignited. After all,
weeping [fletus ], and mourning [luctus ], ofRachel wailing fplorantis] for her God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, Adama and Seboim, in anger (ira)
children" (Jer. 31:15). When Moses died, "the children of Israel wept for and fury (furor). Indeed, the "anger of his fury" (ira furoris) is "immense"
[fleverunt] him in the plains of Moab thirty days: and the days of their (Deut. 29:20-24-). 45 Hatred, however, is never brought together with fury;
mourning fplanctus] in which they mourned (lugentium] for Moses were rather it is often linked to its opposite, love. After Amnon raped his half-
ended" (Deut. 34:8). Tears, however, are multivalent. When Joseph saw his sister, he "hated her [exosam habuit] with an exceeding great hatred [odio]:
brother Benjamin after many years, "he embraced [amplexatus] him and so that the hatred [odium] wherewith he hated [oderat] her was greater than
wept [flevit]: and Benjamin in like manner wept [flente] also on his neck. the love [amore] with which he had loved [dilexerat] her before" (2 Sam.
And Joseph kissed [osculatus] all his brethren, and wept fploravit] upon 13:15). When Samson's wife wanted to know the answer to his riddle, she
every one of them" (Gen. 4-5:14--15). Here family feeling was expressed not wept and complained: "Thou hatest [odisti] me and dost not love [diligis]
by a particular word but rather by the gestures that signified it: embracing, me" (Judg. 14-:16).
weeping, and kissing. Similarly, sorrow was sometimes indicated by groans: Love was a particularly difficult term for any Chri~tian translator because
"For my life is wasted with grief [maerore; dolore]: and my years in groans of its associations to both high virtue (love of God and neighbor) and low
[gemitu;gemitibus ]" (Ps. 30:n). 42 And fear might be indicated by trembling, vice (love of self). When Jerome translated Ecclesiastes 9:5-6, "For the liv-
as when Jesus confronted the woman with the issue of blood: she fell at his ing know that they shall die, but the dead know nothing more, neither have
feet "fearing and trembling [timens et tremens]" (Mark 5:33). they a reward any more: for the memory of them is forgotten. Their love
Emotions are labile and subject to revision. 43 Thus sorrow may turn into also, and their hatred, and their envy are all perished:' he used the Latin
joy, as when Mardochai announces new holy days to the Jews because "on term amor for love. But when he came to translate 1 John 4-:8 and 4-:r6,
those days the Jews revenged themselves, and their mourning [luctus] and "God is love" he used the word caritas for the Greek agape. Later Augustine
sorrow [tristitia] were turned into mirth [hilaritatem] and joy [gaudium], would explain the connection between amor and caritas: "For if it is some-
and ... these should be days of feasting and gladness [laetitiae ]" (Esther one's purpose to love [amare] God and to love [amare] his neighbor as him-
9:22). Or joy may come to an end: "Laughter [risus] shall be mingled with self, not according to man but according to God, . . . this is usually called
sorrow [dolore ], and mourning (luctus] taketh hold of the end of joy caritas in holy scripture~ But it is also termed amor in those same holy writ-
[gaudii]" (Prov. 14-:13). 44 ings?'46 Caritas, which was God's love, was thus equivalent to amor. But was
Anger, too, is associated with other feelings, but not ordinarily its oppo- amor equivalent to caritas? Often enough, even the Fathers were willing to
site. Above all it is paired with fury (juror). In Deuteronomy, Moses warns let the lines blur.47
the Israelites that those who serve another God will not be forgiven, but

4-5. For further associations of the terms ira andforor see I Sam. 20:34-; I Sam. 28:I8; Ps.
68:25; Ps. 84-:5.
4-r. I ordinarily follow the Douay translation, modifYing where necessary. I follow the text 4-6. Augustine, City ofGod I4-.7, ed. Bernardus Dombart andAlphonsus Kalb, CCSL4-7-4-8
of the Vulgate given in Biblia Sacra iuxta vulgata versionem. (Turnhout, I955), p. 4-2I: "Nam cui us propositum est amare Deum et non secundum
4-2. For the Psalms, Jerome gave two versions, one according to the Septuagint (the Greek hominem, sed secundum Deum amare proximum, sicut etiam se ipsum ... quae usitatius in
bible) and one based on the Hebrew version. Hence the different words in parentheses. scripturis sanctis caritas appellatur; sed amor quoque secundum easdem sacras litteras dici-
4-3. Recall the observations ofReddy, Navigation ofFeeling, as discussed above in the intro- tur?' See also Augustine's translation of "God is love" with dilectio in his Tractatus in epistola
duction, at note 73 ]ohannis ad Parthos: "Deus dilectio est;' quoted and discussed in Anita Guerreau-Jalabert,
4-4-. See also James 4-:9: "Be affiicted, and mourn [lugete ], and weep [plorate]: let your "Caritas y don en la sociedad medieval occidental;' Hispania 6o (2ooo): 30.
laughter [risus] be turned into mourning [luctum ], and your joy [gaudium] into sorrow [mo- 4-7. See He!ene Petn~, Caritas. Etude sur le vocabulaire Iatin de la charite chretienne (Louvain,
erorem]?')oy (gaudium) was one of the few Stoic eupatheiae, that is, movements of the soul I94-8), chap. I, for the meanings of diligo and amo, caritas and amor in the classical period;
based on tme judgments, and was thus distinguished, in their scheme, from laetitia. For the amor implicated the body; caritas often implied "esteem"; diligo often suggested "affection?'
Latin terms, see Cicero, Tusculan Disputations 4-.6.I3, p. 34-0. But all three terms might also simply be used as synonyms. In the Christianized Roman em-

4-4- } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages TheAncientLegacy { 4-5


Jerome also transmitted in his translation a theory of the emotions that They were not emotions but rather their first prickings and tinglings-the
grew out of the Stoic view. When Christ explained his parable of"the things Stoic first movements, but in Evagrius's view sent by the demons. 49 If you
come from a man that deftle a man;' he commented: "For from within, out assented to them and let them linger, they would stir up emotions proper:
of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts [cogitationes malae], adulteries "It is up to us whether they linger or not, or whether they stir up emotions
[adulteria], fornications ffornicationes ], murders [homicidia ], thefts rJurta ], [pathe] or not.''50 Assent to the "pleasure of the thought" is sin. 51 You refuse
covetousness [avaritiae], wickedness [nequitiae], deceit [dolus], lascivious- such assent by opposing one thought against another in a kind of psy-
ness [impudicitiae ], an evil eye [oculus malus], blasphemy [blasphemiaj, pride chomachy, a battle of thoughts. Thus, "the demon of vainglory is opposed
[superbia ], foolishness [stultitia ]. All these evil things come from within, and to the demon of fornication and the two cannot assail the soul at the same
defile a man" (Mark 7:15, 21-23). We have seen that one of these words- time, for the first promises honors while the other leads to dishonor. If,
avaritia-was classed as an emotion by Lactantius. And the idea of "evil therefore, one of the two approaches and presses you closely, then elicit in
thoughts" was already in the time of Jerome being assimilated to the Stoic yourself the thoughts of the opposing demon and if you can, drive out one
"first movements;' with important results. nail (as they say) with another.'' 52
The view that evil thoughts were closely tied to emotions was the contri- John Cassian (d. 435), one ofEvagrius's disciples and founder and abbot
bution of the Desert Fathers, and it led to a repudiation of many-though of Saint-Victor at Marseille, latinized and slightly rearranged Evagrius's list
not all- emotions in those who adopted it. This development is clearly seen of "thoughts": gluttony (gastrimawia; ventris ingluvies), lust ifornicatio),
in the work ofEvagrius (d. 399 ), a hermit for the last decade or so of his life avarice (jilawyria; avaritia; amor pecuniae), anger (ira), sadness (tristitia),
in the Nitrian desert in Egypt. 48 A hermit, to be sure; but he was also a anxiety (acedia; anxietas; taedium cordis), ostentation (cenodoxia; jactantia;
teacher with a group of disciples. He left a number of writings, of which his vana gloria), and pride (superbia). But, unlike Evagrius, he did not treat
Practical Treatise is a characteristic example. Here he spoke of "eight them as prior to sin; tl1ey were sins, indeed they were the chief vices (princi-
thoughts": gluttony (gastrimawia), lust (porneia), avarice (philawuria), dis- palia vitia). 53 They were also emotions (for which Cassian used the term pas-
tress (lupe), anger (owe), acedia, vanity (kenodoxia), pride (huperphania). siones). Thus Jesus was tempted by fornicatio but was "free of the contagion
of this passion.''54

pire, as Petrc: argues in chaps. 2 and 3, caritas was used less often than dilectio, but when it was
employed, in her view, it normally meant spiritual love, though there might be exceptions. 49. Evagrius of Pontus, Practical Treatise 6, in Evagre de Pontique, Traiti pratique ou Le
Emile Schmitt points out that even St. Augustine saw marriage as a locus of caritas; Schmitt, moine, ed. and trailS. Antoine Guillaumont and Claire Guillaumont, 2 vols., se 170-71 (Paris,
Le mariage chrtftien dans l'oeuvre de Saint Augustin. Une thiologie baptismale de la vie conjugate 1971), 2:506-9. The editors provide an excellent background to Evagrius's scheme; ibid.,
(Paris, 1983), pp. 280-87. Guerreau-Jalabert, "Caritas y don:' reveals the many ways in which 1:38-84. Origen had said that the demons introduced these thoughts, and Evagrius largely-
caritas was used to represent a variety of social relations throughout the Middle Ages. See but not entirely-adopted this idea; see the discussion below in chap. 6 at note 83, and see
also eadem, "Spiritus et caritas. Le bapteme clans la societe medievale:' in La parenti spirituelle. Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, p. 359.
Textes rassemblis etprisentis, ed. Fran~oise Heritier-Auge and Elisabeth Copet-Rougier (Paris, so. Evagrius ofPontus, Practical Treatise 6, 2:508-9.
1995), pp. 133-203. Verena Epp argues that caritas, dilectio and amor were synonymous for sr. Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, p. 360.
many writers in the early Middle Ages; Epp, Amicitia. Zur Geschichte persona/er, sozialer, poli- 52. Evagrius, Practical Treatise sS, 2:636-37.
tischer und geistlicher Beziehungen im frUhen Mittelalter (Stuttgart, 1999 ), pp. 37-42. Isabelle 53. John Cassian, Conlationes XXIII! 5.2, ed. Michael Petschenig, CSEL 13, pt. 2 (Vie'nna,
Real notes that in the Merovingian world amor tended to be used for physical, passionate 1886), p. 121. I am grateful to Calumba Stewart for discussions concerning Cassian's notion of
love, while dilectio and caritas referred to the licit love of married couples; Real, Vies de saints, the emotions.
vie de famille. &presentation et systeme de la parenti dans le Royaume mirovingien (48I-7SI) 54 Cassian, Conlationes s.s, p. 124: "absque huius passionis contagia"; see also ibid., 5.7.1,
d'apres les sources hagiographiques (Turnhout, 2001), pp. 350-51. p. 127, where Cassian interrupts himself to talk about the vices-here called passions-be-
48. Nevertheless, the first to make the association between pre-emotions and "bad yond gluttony and fornication: "Et ut de efficientiis ceterarum quoque passionum, quarum
thoughts" was Origen (d. ea. 254); see Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, p. 346. narrationem intercidere nos expositio ... conpulit ... disserarnus?' (Now to talk about the

46 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Ancient Legacy { 47


I,.
In this way, under the aegis of the Desert Fathers, the "deadly sins" orig- head" (fons) of all the emotions. 58 He himself noted that a man in distress
inated in theories of emotion. In effect the Fathers were simply hardening will give in to fear and depression as well. 59 For Galen, "insatiate desire" was
ancient views-chiefly those of Plato and the Stoics-that disapproved of "a kind of foundation for covetousness, love of glory, ambition, lust for
the emotions and founded whole ethical schemes on their extirpation or power, and love of strife .... And yet I would not hesitate to say that greed
control. The best-known list of sins, the one by Pope Gregory the Great (d. [pleonexia] is the foundation [krepis] of all these vices?'60
604-), separated pride (superbia) from the others as the "root" (radix) of all Yet long traditions cannot obviate the very real changes introduced by
the rest, leaving seven: vanity (inanisgloria), envy (invidia), anger (ira), sad- Evagrius, Cassian, and the other Desert Fathers. They turned some emo-
ness (tristitia), avarice (avaritia), gluttony (ventris ingluvies), and lust (luxu- tions into sins and thus freighted them with meanings not explicitly given
ria).55 Of these, only gluttony was not directly part of the emotions tradi- other emotions. 6l Sin, in the view of the post-Nicaean church, was tied to
tion of the past. But in fact no thinker had ever entirely dissociated bodily the flesh. 62 When emotions became sins, they ceased to be cognitive ap-
appetites from mental desires. Plato had locatedgastrima13ia at the lower praisals (as they had been for the Stoics) and became, instead, part of man's
depths of the mortal soul, along with the other epithumiai. Aristotle some- corrupt and fallible nature. 63 One consequence of this was that some emo-
times included thirst and hunger among the pathe. 56 The Stoic "first move- tion words could do double duty, expressing both feelings and moral
ments" and tl1eir second judgment about "appropriate reactions" were as states. In like fashion, virtue was now sometimes conceptualized as con-
much distress of the body as of the soul. The medical model of Galen and trary to emotion: "Because the vices are motions and perturbations of the
others considered the physiological states that lay behind psychological soul, virtue is, by contrast, calmness and tranquility of soul:' wrote Lactan-
ones. 57 Already Evagrius considered gastrima13ia one of the "eight tius.64
thoughts:' a prelude to emotions, so that when Cassian turned it into a vice At the same time, however, while stopping up the parade of emotion
and a passion, he was not taking a big step. words, the Desert Fathers let loose the wordless signs of emotional out-
The "organic" metaphor of a root (pride) with branches (the sins) was pouring. For Cassian, compunction made itselflmown by shouts (clamores),
also a natural outgrowth of the emotions tradition. The ancient philoso- groans (gemitus), and tears. 65 Indeed, Cassian parsed the causes of weeping:
phers had long recognized the interrelatedness of emotional states. Cicero some tears came of compunction, others of joy, or of terror, or of pity. 66 "I
reported that the Stoics called intemperance (intemperantia) the "fountain-

58. Cicero, Tusculan Disputations 4.9.22, p. 348.


effects of the other passions, which the exposition on Christ compelled us to interrupt.) Au- 59. Ibid., 3.7.14, p. 242.
gustine conveniently sums up all the Latin equivalents of the Greek path&: "Duae snnt sen- 6o. Galen, De propriorum animi cuiuslibet affictuum dignotione et curatione ro, ed. Wilko de
tentiae philosophorum de his animi motibus, quae Graeci path&, nostri autem quidam, sicut Boer (Leipzig, 1937), p. 35; Galen, On the Passions, pp. 65-66. I dunk my colleague James
Cicero, perturbationes, quidam affectiones vel affectus, quidam vero, sicut iste, de Graeco ex- Keenan for helping me with Galen's Greek.
pressius passiones vocant?' (Among the philosophers there are two views of these motions of 6r. But, on anotl1er view, we might say that "the part stands for the whole" and that the
the soul [animi motibus ], which tl1e Greeks call path& but which some of ns, like Cicero, call Seven Deadly Sins are prototypes for all tl1e sins, as is argued in George Lakoff, Women, Fire,
perturbationes and which others call affictiones or affictus, and still others, like [Apuleius ], call and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind (Chicago, 1986), p. 89.
passiones, which is closer to the Greek.) Augustine, City of God 9.4, ed. Bernard Dombart and 62. On the change, see the suggestive remarks of Susanna Elm, 'CVit;gins ofGod": The,Mak-
Alfons Kalb, CCSL47 (Turnhout, 1955), p. 25r. ing ofAsceticism in Late Antiquity (Oxford, 1994), pp. 379-Sr.
55. Gregory the Great, Moralia in job 3!.45.87, ed. Marcus Adriaen, CCSL 143, 143A, 143B 63. To some extent, cognitive psychologists are still battling this development. See Phoebe
(Turnhout, 1979, 1985), p. 1610. C. Ellsworth, "Some Implications of Cognitive Appraisal Theories of Emotion:' in Interna-
56. Stephen R. Leighton, '%:istotle and the Emotions:' in Essays on Aristotle's Rhetoric, ed. tional Review of Studies on Emotion, vol. 1, ed. KenT. Strongman (Chichester, 1991), 143-44.
Amdie Oksenberg Rorty (Berkeley, 1996), p. 220. 64. Lactantius, Divinae institutiones 7.ro, PL 6, col. 768: "Quia vitia commotiones et per-
57. James Hankinson, ''Actions and Passions: Affection, Emotion and Moral Self- turbationes animi sunt, virtus e contrario lenimdo et tranquillitas animi est?'
Management in Galen's Philosophical Psychology:' in Passions and Perceptions, ed. Bmn- 65. Cassian, Conlationes 9.27, p. 274.
schwig and Nussbaum, pp. 220-2r. 66. Ibid., 9.29-30, pp. 274-76.

48 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages TheAncientLegacy { 49


the emotions were good; oriented toward the world, they were evil. And
can't think of a state more sublime~' said Germanus, Cassian's genial inter-
thus for Augustine, as for Lactantius, it was perfectly possible for God him-
locutor, as he recalled the joy of one episode of weeping. 67
selfto befulloffeelings: "You love [amas] butyoudon'tburn [aestuas], you
Greatly admiring the Desert Fathers but not one himself, St. Augustine
are jealous [zelas] but untroubled [securus], you repent [paenitet] without
(d. 430 ), bishop of Hippo and arguably the most influential Christian
thinker during the Early Middle Ages, gave a new direction to the emotions sorrowing [doles], you get angry [irasceris] yet you are tranquil?' 72
A book could (and should) be written about Augustine's emotional vo-
tradition that in effect reconciled the two attitudes (welcoming versus hos-
cabulary. Here, however, I merely wish to explore briefly an aspect of his
tile) discussed here. Augustine accepted most emotions as good if rightly
emotional expression that few of the writings we have thus far seen had
ordered, bad if wrongly directed. 68 Conjoining "first movements" with the
cause to bring up: terms of endearment.73 In Augustine's writings there are
emotions, he subjected all "motions" to the will:69
three chief words of affection: dulcis (sweet) and its superlative, dulcissimus
The important factor ... is the character of a man's will [voluntas]. If the (sweetest); dilectus (beloved) and its superlative, dilectissimus (related to the
will is wrongly directed, the emotions [motus] will be wrong; if the will is verb diligere) to love); and carus (dear) and its superlative, carissimus (related
right the emotions will be not only blameless, but praiseworthy. The will to caritas). In the Confessions) for example, God is "most sweet" (dulcis-
is engaged in all of them; in fact they are all essentially acts of will. For simus), as is Nebridius, the "sweetest and kindest of friends" (amicus dulcis-
what is desire [cupiditas] or happiness [laetitia] but an act of will [volun- simus et mitissimus).74 Indeed, Nebridius is "dearest'' (carissimus).7 5 In the
tas] in agreement [consensione] with what we wish for? And what is fear City of God Marcellinus, the chaste imperial commissioner who asks Augus-
[metus] or sadness [tristitia] but an act of will in disagreement with what tine to write the book, is his "dearest son" (filius carissimus). 76 Isaac is, in
77
we reject?7 Augustine's view, Abraham's "most beloved" (dilectissimus) son.
We have now a real thesaurus of words: nouns, verbs, adjectives. Nor
Corrupted by the Fall, the human will ordinarily assented to the wrong should we forget tl1at almost all verbs can become adjectives: iratus (an-
things. But with God's grace, a person could rightly be "angry [irasci] at a gered) is as much an emotion word as ira (anger). Table 3 summarizes the
sinner to correct him, feel sorrow [contristari] for the afflicted to free him, word hoard gathered here. It is entirely open-ended since it cannot pretend
fear [timere] that a person in danger might perish?'71 Oriented toward God, to be exhaustive. Nevertheless, it is a fair sampling. We shall see that some
early emotional communities drew almost exclusively from this list, for its
67. Ibid., 9.28, p. 274: "quo statu reor nihil esse sublimius?' terms, after all, came from the normative vocabulary of the bible, among
68. The exception was lust; see Sorabji, Emotion and Peace ofMind, chap. 26. other sources. Other communities discovered some different modes of ex"
69. Augustine was ambivalent about the importance of first movements. In City of God pression. The vernacular languages added new possibilities. Nevertheless, it
14.19 he "fail[ed] to distinguish first movements from emotions;" see Sorabji, Emotion and may be said that even today our theories of emotions and our modes of ex-
Peace ofMind, p. 384. But in his sermons he elaborated on the "cognitive cause of'preliminary
pressing them-through words, gestures, and terms of endearment-are
passions;" namely doubt; see Sarah C. Byers, '~ugustine and the Cognitive Cause of Stoic
'Preliminary Passions' (Propatheiai);' journal of the History ofPhiwsophy 41 (2003): 433.
72. Augustine, Confessions r.4.4, ed. Labriolle, r:s: '~as nee aestuas, zelas et securus es,
70. Augustine, City ofGod 14.6, p. 421: "Interest autem qualis sit voluntas hominis; quia si
paenitet te et non doles, irasceris et tranquillus es?'
perversa est, perversos habebit hoc motus; si autem recta est, non solum inculpabiles, verum
73 The exception is the bible, where, for example, Paul calls Timothy "filius meus charis-
etiam laudabiles erunt. Voluntas est quippe in omnibus; immo omnes nihil aliud quam vol-
untates sunt. Nam quid est cupiditas et laetitia nisi voluntas in eorum consensione quae simus" (my dearest son) (r Cor 4:17).
74 Augustine, Confessions 7-3-S, r:r49; ibid., 8.6.13, r:r86.
volumus? Et quid est metus atque tristitia nisi voluntas in dissensione ab his quae nolumus?"
The translation here is taken from Augustine, City of God, ed. David Knowles, trans. Henry 7S Ibid., 4.3.6, I:70.
76. Augustine, City of God praef., p. r.
Bettenson (Harmondsworth, England, 1972), p. sss, slightly modified.
77- Ibid., r6.32, p. S36, elaborating on the bible's "Tolle filium ... quem diligis" (Take your
7I. Augustine, City ofGod 9-S, p. 2S4: "Irasci enim peccanti ut corrigatur, contristari pro ad-
son, whom you love) (Gen22:2).
flicto ut liberetur, timere periclitanti ne pereat?'

The Ancient Legacy { sr


so } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
TAB LE 3 . Partial Latin Emotion Word List and Approximate obtrectatio, jealousy sollicitudo, worry
English Equivalents obtrectare, to be jealous sollicitari, to worry
odium, hatred spes, hope
adfiictiojadflictatio, pain exanimatio, paralyzing terror odisse, to hate superbia, pride
adfiictari, to be miserable or excandescentia, heatedness (of anger) osculor, to kiss terror, terror
afflicted exosus, hated paenitere, to repent timor, fright
aegritudo, pain, distress fietus, weeping pallor, whitening from fear timere, to fear
aemulatio, rivalry fiere, to weep passio, emotion tremor, trembling from fear
aemulari, to be envious formido, dread pavor, panic tremere, to shudder
aerumna, weariness fornicatio, lust perturbatio, emotion tristitia, sorrow
affectus, emotion JUror, fury pigritia, indolence, sloth tristis, sad
amor, love gastrimargia, gluttony planctus, mourning ventris ingluvies, gluttony
amare, to love gaudium, joy plorare, to weep and wail voluptas, pleasure
amplexor, to embrace gemitus, sigh pudor, shame zelus, jealousy, rivalry
angorjanxietas, anxiety hilaritas, cheerfulness risus, laughter zelare, to be jealous
angi, to be vexed inanis gloria, vainglory rubor, blushing from shame
audacia, recklessness indigentia, need, greed
avaritia, covetousness, avarice inimicitia, enmity Note: I provide here the list from Cicero (table 2) intermingled with emotion words
caritas, love invidentia, envying drawn from other ancient writers surveyed in this chapter. The words here are a small
sample of the available vocabulary. Emotion markers are not separated from other
carusjcarissimus, dear/dearest invidia, envy, spite
emotion words here.
clamor, shout invidere, to envy
commotio animi, (strong) emotion ira, anger
contristari, feel sympathy for irasci, to get angry
conturbatio, agitation jactatio, ostentation not cut off from their corresponding elements in the ancient world. Just
cupiditas, desire lacrimae, tears how closely our own lists track the old ones is my next and final point.
delectatio, pleasure laetitia, happiness
dentium crepitus, chattering of teeth lamentatio, lamenting, mourning
from fear lamentari, to lament MODERN LISTS

desiderium, desire, longing libido, desire Modern scientists and scholars often spealc with uncanny authority on
desperatio, despair luctus, grief which words belong in the category of "emotions?' Rom Ham~ observes:
desperare, to despair "One well known textbook [on emotions] mentions only depression, anxi-
lugere, to grieve
dilectusjdilectissimus, beloved/most ety, lust and anger, but lust and depression are not emotions. Depression is
maeror, sorrow
a mood and lust a bodily agitation?' 78 In fact, however, not all psychologists
beloved maerere, to sorrow
agree that depression is not an emotion; Ken Strongman, for one, calls it
diligere, to love malevolentia, malice, spite
just that.79 The same may be said for lust, which figures in the list of emo-
discordia, discord metus, fear, dread
dolor, sorrow misericordia, pity
dolere, to sorrow misereri, to pity 78. Social Construction ofEmotions, ed. Ham!, p. s.
dulcisjdulcissimus, sweet/sweetest molestia, annoyance 79. KenT. Strongman, The Psychology ofEmotion (3d ed., Chichester, 1987), pp. 2o8-r2.
elatio animi, emotion motus, emotion
TheAncientLegacy {53
tion words under "love" in an article on the emotions published by Phillip for Plutchik, translations of "fear?' Or, rather, since "fear" is of lower in-
Shaver in the same year as Harn~ was writing. 80 tensity than "terror:' Plutchik pairs the two. Thus "fear/terror" corre-
Thus, despite the authoritative tone of scholars on the topic, there is no sponds to "withdrawing/escaping:' and both in turn correspond to "pro-
agreement about precisely what terms belong in the category of emotion. tection?' Plutchik has eight such emotions: fear/terror, angerjrage;
Each theory perforce generates its own list. 81 The most famous of these in- joy/ecstasy; sadness/grief; acceptance/trust; disgust/loathing; ex-
ventories is Paul Ekman and Wallace Friesen's, who claimed to have iso- pectancy/anticipation; surprisejastonishment. 84 Like the Stoics, he
lated six universal emotions: happiness, sadness, fear, disgust, anger, and arranges these as a grid- but his grid is shaped like a top. He has the eight
surprise. 82 The two psychologists showed pictures of people whose facial most vehement subjective emotions on the crown of the top, with grief
expressions "corresponded" to each emotion. Even people outside ofWest- opposite ecstasy and so on. Again, as with the Stoics, other emotions
ern cultures could (more or less) correctly name the emotion that corre- then are classed under this topmost grid, with "pensiveness:' for example,
sponded to tl1e grimace. But more recently Ekman has become interested going down one side of the top, ranked under "griefjsadness?' 85 Elabo-
in autonomic nervous system patterns, and this has led him to postulate rating on Plutchik's scheme, Phillip Shaver and his associates argue that
seventeen basic emotions. These are "amusement, anger, awe, contempt, emotion categories such as "fear" are "fuzzy sets:' in and around which
contentment, disgust, embarrassment, excitement, fear, guilt, interest, many other "emotion names" may cluster. They identify 135 words that
pride in achievement, relief, sadness, satisfaction, sensory pleasure, and arguably signify an emotion. 86 But Keith Oatley, a cognitivist who hy-
shame?'83 pothesizes that emotions manage changes in plans or goals, suggests five
Both ofEkman's lists are grounded in the Darwinian notion that emo- basic emotions: happiness, sadness, fear, anger, and disgust. Each accom-
tions (and their bodily concomitants) are products of evolution and thus plishes a different transition. 87
species related. Other lists depend on different theories. Robert Plutchik
is also a Darwinian, but he is interested in translating the subjective lan- There is, then, both enormous disagreement and considerable overlap
guage of emotions into behavioral and functional terms common to both within modern scholarly definitions. As we have seen, this was equally
human beings and animals. Consider the behavioral words "withdraw- characteristic of the ancient world's view of emotions. In addition many
ing" and "escaping" or the functional term that corresponds to those be- emotion words inventoried in modern lists were (in their Greek or Latin
haviors, "protection?' "Withdrawing:' "escaping:' and "protection" are, equivalents) part of the repertory. that ancient writers considered to be
pathe or perturbationes. The top ten of Shaver's "prototypical" emotions,
that is, the emotion words that his respondents-all psychology students
so. Phillip Shaver et al., "Emotion Knowledge: Further Exploration of a Prototype Ap-
at the University of Denver- most frequently identified as "an emotion"
proach;' Journal ofPersonality and Social Psychology 52 (1987): ro66, table r, where lust shows
high "prototypicality'' ratings. See also Sandra Metts, Susan Sprecher, and Pamela C. Regan,
were (in order of most prototypical to least): love, anger, hate, depression,
"Communication and Sexual Desire;' in Handbook of Communication and Emotion: Research, fear, jealousy, happiness, passion, affection, and sadness~ If we translated
Theory, Applications, and Contexts, ed. Peter A. Andersen and Laura K. Guerrero (San Diego, these words into Latin, all would fit nicely into table 3. There is, then, no
1998), pp. 353-77- reason to worry that studying the emotions of the Western Middle Ages
SI. The study of emotion by psychologists is relatively new. Consider Approaches to Emo-
tion, ed. Klaus R. Scherer and Paul Ekman (Hillsdale, N.J., 1984), p. xi: ''After many years of
neglect during which time only a few scholars were concerned with emotion ... emotion 84. Robert Plutchik, "Emotions: A General Psychoevolutionary Theory;' in Approaches to
has become a vital, almost fashionable topic in the social and behavioral sciences?' Emotion, ed. Scherer and Ekman, p. 200, table 8.r.
82. Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen, "Constants across Culn1res in the Face and Emo- ss. Ibid., p. 203, fig. s.r.
tion;' Journal ofPersonality and Social Psychology 17 (1971): 124-29. 86. See Shaver et al., "Emotion Knowledge;' p. ro66, table. r, where the emotion words are
83. Paul Ekman, ''All Emotions Are Basic;' in The Nature of Emotion: Fundamental Ques- listed.
tions, ed. Paul Ekman and Richard J. Davidson (New York, 1994), p. r8. 87. Oadey, Best Laid Schemes, p. 55, table 3, for the basic emotions.

54 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Ancient Lrgacy { 55


is any more anachronistic than studying its universities, ideas, or political
institutions. To be sure, all were different from their manifestations
today, 88 but in every case the historian can have fair hopes of entering
sympathetically into a mind-set that is not entirely foreign to her own.
Western emotions have persisted over the long haul.

88. The differences between ancient Greek emotions and our own are made clear in Kon-
stan, Emotions of the Ancient Greeks.
The ancient world offered a large repertory of ideas about emotions and
words to express them, as chapter r has suggested. But subsequent groups
drew on this treasury only selectively. For one thing, they had other reper-
tories-sub-Latin and perhaps vernacular ideas and words-to work with.
For another, different groups used certain modes of expression- but not
others-because the norms and habits of their particular emotional com-
munity made some forms of expression more comfortable and automatic
than others.
We may be able to glimpse different contemporaneous emotional com-
munities of the Early Middle Ages- groups that drew upon the traditional
vocabulary in different ways-via the funerary epitaph. This was generally
inscribed on a small marble plaque placed in a niche in the cover of a tomb.
We know of about fifteen hundred Christian funerary inscriptions from
Gaul, dating from circa 350 to 750J Although often scattered, important
clusters exist in a few places, allowing us to associate types of epitaphs-and
the sentiments they express-with places and settlements. The cities with
the greatest number of funerary inscriptions are, in order, Trier, Vienne, and
Lyon. In this chapter, we shall consider the inscriptions from Trier, Vienne,
and Clermont (see map of the Early Medieval West), for the very practical
reason that they exist in excellent critical editions. We shall see enough
differences to suggest that funerary inscriptions may be one revealing ele-
ment of emotional communities in the Early Middle Ages. They must al-

1. See Yitzhak Hen, Culture and Religion inMerovingian Gaul, A.D. 48I-7SI (Leiden, 1995),

p. 146. In e-mail conversations with me, Nancy Gauthier seconded this estimate;' I wish to
thank Prof. Gauthier for her help with all aspects of this chapter. A much higher estimate-
2,657 inscriptions- has been given in Handley, Death, Society and Culture, p. 5 But this is be-
cause he counts fragments, some as small as a single letter or decorative motif. See also idem,
"Beyond Hagiography: Epigraphic Commemoration and the Cult of Saints -in Late Antique
Trier;' in Society and Culture in Late Antique Gaul: Revisiting the Sources, ed. Ralph W.
Mathisen and Danuta Shanzer (Aldershot, 2001), p. 188, where Handley gives the number
"more than 25oo?'

56 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


ways be considered partial indicators because, while they can hint at norms
about expressing grief, affection, and other emotions connected with death,
they cannot tell us about the emotions invoked in other aspects of life. Fur-
thermore, they are rare. Although these materials demand to be counted-
and the next few pages are filled with numbers and even some percent-
ages-I do not claim to be using statistics. The numbers are meant simply to
be suggestive. Supplemented by the evidence brought together in the ensu-
ing chapters, they may help to elucidate the notion of emotional communi-
ties and their vicissitudes.
People at Trier, Clermont, and Vienne privileged different ways of' ex-
pressing their feelings about death and dead ones. 2 At Trier, they had a
repertory of eleven emotion words; at Clermont they used only seven, not
all overlapping with the Trier vocabulary. At Vienne, twenty-four words ex-
pressed feeling. This comparatively high number had little to do with the
number of inscriptions there. A rough-and-ready estimate would put the
number of inscriptions from Vienne at about half those ofTrier. 3
We cannot attribute the repertory of emotion words simply to the ate-
liers that carved the inscriptions. Mark Handley has recently argued that in-
scriptions were mainly borrowed from model books-though perhaps
different ones for each cemetery workshop-and that some "boilerplate"
may already have been carved before inscriptions were commissioned. 4 But
this does not obviate the important role of the client. Individual choices by
commemorators were involved at every step. First, they had to decide

2. Margaret King outlines the reasons for scholarly opposition to using epitaphs to recover

MAP OF THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST emotions: the sentiments expressed are conventional rather than "genuine"; King, "Com-
memoration oflnfants on Roman Funerary Inscriptions;' in The Epigraphy ofDeath: Studies
in the History and Society of Greece and Rome, ed. G. J. Oliver (Liverpool, 2000 ), pp. 119-21.
But we have seen that emotions are indeed expressed tl1rough conventions and for conven-
tional, habitual, and "automatic" purposes. It is only the hydraulic view that demands that
emotions "well up" spontaneously; me social constructionist view recognizes that the
welling up itself-however personal it may feel-is highly scripted by social nqrms. On
pp. 131-34 King makes much the same point.
3 Where possible, I have considered only inscriptions that can be contexmalized wimin
particular cemeteries: at Trier, I consider only me inscriptions from the cemeteries of Saint
Eucherius (to the south) and Saint-Paulin and Saint-Maximin to the north; at Vienne, I con-
sider me inscriptions from the cemeteries of Saint-Gervais, Saint-Severe, and Saint-Pierre.
There are too few inscriptions at Clermont to allow for such contextualization.
4. Handley, Death, Society and Culture, pp. 28-29.

Confronting Death { 59
whether or not to commission an epitaph for the deceased. This may well sions. s These small changes tell us that no formula book ruled for all time.
have been, in part, an economic issue. Inscriptions cost money. Then the Even workshops were social products; they took their cues, however slowly
words had to be chosen. If an emotion word was added, that meant addi- and with however much inertia, from those who made use of them.
tional costs. In some instances, it looks as if the cutter could not read the "Banal;' is the word that the inscriptions' modern editors use for the
text supplied to him by the patron of the stone, which means that at least in most routine of the formulae. But what was banal at Trier was not so at Vi-
those cases the patron, not the carver, made the decision about which words enne. At Vienne most people commissioning epitaphs were careful to spec-
to use. 5 ifY dates; at Trier people almost never added dates to their inscriptions. At
A letter from Sidonius Apollinaris (d. ea. 484 ), bishop of Clermont dur- Trier the ages of the deceased were specified with an accuracy (even to the
ing the last decade of his life, suggests how natural it was for an aristocrat day) that was rare at either Clermont or Vienne. 9 Banality, as we have seen,
from southern Gaul to write and put up an epitaph to honor the dead. In is useful to the historian of emotions, telling us what sentiments-or non-
this instance the deceased was Claudianus Mamertus, a priest at Vienne and sentiments-are socially normative under particular circumstances. If the
brother of a bishop there, who had written a book on the nature. of the soul banalities of early medieval Christian epigraphs in Gaul were different in
and dedicated it to Sidonius. Claudianus had averred that he was Sidonius's different places, that should alert us to the possibility that we are dealing
"special and intimate" (specialis atque intumus) friend, and Sidonius had re- with different emotional communities.
plied with effusive praise. When he learned of Claudianus's death, Sidonius To be sure, all of these inscriptions belonged to one overarching commu-
wrote to the dead man's great-nephew, mingling words of grief with remi- nity, since the fact that the inscriptions were Christian implies that those
niscences and homage, and including a poem which he reports "having in- who paid for the plaques, and those who lay beneath them, belonged to the
scribed over the bones" (super . .. ossa conscripsi) of his "like-minded universal community of believers. Sharing a common religious affiliation,
brother'' (unanimi fratris).6 they agreed on spiritual aspirations and therefore, again in a general sort of
To be sure, few people composed long original poems. There were for- way, on the emotions appropriate to the Christian life. 10 However distinc-
mulae, and most of the epitaphs adhered to them. However, these formulae tive the clusters of such words were for each community, nevertheless nearly
could-and did-change. For example, in the region around Trier the all of the emotional vocabulary they used is either included in table 3 or is
phrase pro caritate (for love) was replaced after circa soo by equivalent- but related to a word therein.U We know that some people moved about and
different- expressions, such as propter caritate (on account of love), pro
amore (for love), and pro dilectione (for love). 7 Sometimes changes followed
8. Consider, for example, d1e adoption of the formula plus minus to indicate approximate
waves of fashion emanating from Rome. Trier was especially prone to fol-
age. The phrase was first used at Rome and appropriated at Trier before it was taken up at any
low the styles of the Eternal City, no doubt because it had been an imperial other place in Gaul. See Gauthier's remarks, RICG I, p. 42.
residence itself, with long~distance connections and high-flown preten- 9. On the norms for reporting age, see Gauthier's introductory comments in RICG I,
pp.40-42.
5. E. g., Recueil des inscriptions chri!tiennes de la Gaule anti!rieures ala Renaissance carolingienne ro. See Oadey, Best Laid Schemes, on goals and emotions.
(hereafter RICG), vol. r, Premiere Belgique, ed. Nancy Gauthier (Paris, 1975) (hereafter RICG n. Indeed, only two words in the emotional vocabulary of d1e inscriptions from Trier,
I), no. 194A; see Gauthier's remarks on p. 484. Clermont, and Vienne are not derived from words on table 3: levamen and so/amen, both of
6. Sidonius, Letters, Books III-IX, 4.2, trans. W. B. Anderson, Loeb Classical Libraty (Cam- , which mean "solace" or "comfort?' Neverd1eless they have an analog in the Vulgate: solacium.
bridge, 1965), pp. 64-68, for Claudianus's letter to Sidonius (quote on p. 66), and ibid., 4.3, This term, a less poetic equivalent for solamen, is there associated with feelings, as in Phi!. 2:2,
pp. 68-78, for Sidonius's reply. For the epitaph itself, see ibid., 4.n, pp. ro6-8. About a cen- where it is linked to love (solacium caritatis). It is, of course, possible that I wrongly include
tury later, Venantius Fortunatus, an Italian who ingratiated himself with the Gallic elite (see so/amen and levamen as emotion words; the English word "relief;' which I take to be the feel-
below, chap. 4) busied himself by writing epitaphs as well: see the entire fourth book of ing of one who has been "comforted;' is number 63 in Shaver's list of 213 emotion words
Venantius Fortunatus, Poems in Venance Fortunat Poemes, ed. and trans. Marc Reydellet, Les (Shaver et al., "Emotion Knowledge;' table r). But Shaver does not include "solace" in his list
Belles Lettres, 2 vols. (Paris, 1994, 1998), r:r30-63. at all. Naturally the Vulgate is not the only source for Latin emotion words of Late Antiquity,
7 RICG I, p. roo. as I have already remarked in chapter r.

6o } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 6r


yet were comfortable with the epigraphic formulae of their adopted homes. Even before the Constantinian revolution, which made Christianity the
Optata and her husband, for example, who put up an epitaph for their son favored religion of the empire, Trier had had some Christian inhabitants.
Numidius at Trier, were probably from North Mrica (Optata was a com- Possibly the earliest of these were Greek in origin, finding their way to Trier
mon name in Mrica, and Numidius recalls the Roman province of Nu- via the Mediterranean trading emporium of Marseille. In the third century
midia). Yet they chose an inscription for their son's stone that would have Trier had a bishop, and in the fourth century it boasted a grand episcopal
pleased just about any native at Trier. 12 Thus, the different emotional com- complex, with two churches, a baptistery, and building annexes. 15 Around
munities at Trier, Clermont, and Vienne were what I have called "subordi- the same time several funerary churches were built outside the walls of the
nate": they were subsets of the same Christian emotional community that city. Here is where Christians were buried and where most of the inscrip-
existed in Gaul (and elsewhere) from the fifth through the seventh cen- tions on behalf of the dead at Trier are found. Although most burials in
turies.13
these cemeteries, as elsewhere, were not marked by fimerary inscriptions, a
significant number of epitaphs have been found at Trier. 16
"THE SWEETEST LITTLE GIRL": FAMILY AFFECTION AT TRIER
Just outside the city's southern wall was the church of Saint Eucharius
The city ofTrier, strategically situated on the Moselle river between Mainz (today Saint-Mathias) surrounded by its cemetery; just beyond Trier's
and Metz, was a major commercial center in the Roman period. Under the northern gate was the cemetery of the churches of Saint-Paulin and Saint-
emperors Diocletian (d. 316) and Constantine (d. 337) it became an imperial Maximin. These are the sources of the inscriptions to be considered here,
residence. In its heyday, the fourth century, its population may have been as since these cemeteries formed real communities of the dead and the living,
high as sixty thousand souls. In the fifth century the city was buffeted by the who were associated with one another not only by commemoration but
wars between the "Romans" and the "barbarians:' or, at any rate, by the also by the saint near to whose church the burials were located. At Trier each
army leaders who claimed to represent those sides. Around 475 Trier came cemetery had an identity; as Handley has pointed out, "the devotees of a
under Frankish rule, and in the ensuing two centuries its population shrank particular saint's cult were marked out not only by the location of their buri-
dramatically.l 4 Under the Merovingians, Frankish rulers from circa 480 to als, but also by the decoration, layout, and style of their epitaphs .... A cor-
751, Trier was part of the kingdom or subkingdom of Austrasia, but it was porate and unified image was being presented?' 17
not a capital city: Metz, to its south, had that honor.
The common, indeed stereotypical formula for both cemeteries is exem-
plified by the inscription for Numidius, to which we have already made ref-
12. RICG~ no. 45 For more on the formulaic quality of the inscription Optata and her
husband commissioned, see note 18 below.
erence: "Here lies in peace Numidius, who lived 7 years; Valerius and Op-
13. Lisa Bailey, "Building Urban Christian Communities: Sermons on Local Saints in the
Eusebius Gallicanus Collection;' Early Medieval Europe 12 (2003): 1-24 shows that Christian 15. TCCG: Trier, pp. 22-23.
"tradition" was "not a monolith, uniformly applied, but ... a vocabulary upon which [local] r6. The number depends on how one assesses the fragments. Katalog der .friihchristlichen
preachers could choose to draw and which they could shape to their own ends" (p. 2). We see Inschriften in Trier, ed. Erich Gose (Berlin, 1958) (hereafter Gose) inventories almost every
the same selective recourse to the thesaurus of Christian emotional vocabulary in local in- piece, for a total of845, plus several double-sided stones. RICG ~rather than repeating all the
scriptions. Compare Peter Brown's notion of"micro-Christendoms" in The Rise ofWestern fragments taken up by Gose, counts only those sufficiently complete to merit comment, plus
Christendom: Triumph and Diversity A.D. 200-rooo (Oxford, 1996 ), and see also Eric Rebillard, some not accounted for by Gose (seep. 37), for a total of 242 (plus some two-~ided stones).
''In hora mortis.>' Evolution de la pastorale chretienne de la mort aux IV' et V' siecles dans !'accident J(atalog der .friihchristlichen Inschriften des bischiiflichen Dom- und Diifzesanmuseums Trier, ed.
Latin (Rome, 1994), in which very different Christian attitudes toward death are parsed. Hiltrud Merten (Trier, 1990) (hereafter Merten), which contains 127 items, repeats many of
14. For the historical background, see Nancy Gauthier, IJEvangelisation des pays de la the entries in Gose and RICG I while adding a few more hitherto unpublished.
Moselle. La province romaine de Premiere Belgique entre Antiquite et Moyen age, Ill'-VIII' siecles 17. See Handley, "Beyond Hagiography;' pp. 195, 196-97, including note 58, for discussion
(Paris, 1980); Topographie chretienne des cites de la Gaule des origines au milieu du VIII' siecle, ed. of the fact that it "mattered [to people] where they were buried?' For more on the ways that
Nancy Gauthier and J.-Ch. Picard (hereafter TCCG), vol. r: Province ecclesiastique de Treves epitaphs were used to express identity, see idem, "Inscribing Time and Identity in the King-
(BelgicaPrima), ed. Nancy Gauthier (Paris, 1986) (hereafter TCCG: Trier); and Eugen Ewig, dom of Burgundy;' in Ethnicity and Culture in Late Antiquity, ed. Stephen Mitchell and Ge-
Trier im Merowingerreich. Civitas, Stadt, Bistum (Trier, 1954). offrey Greatrex (London, 2000 ), pp. 83-ro2.

62 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 63


fragmentary stone to be the name of a person or a reference to the joys of
tata, his parents, put up this epitaph.'' 18 The great majority of inscriptions at
the life to come. 23 Finally the opposite of joy, dolor (sorrow), appears
Trier are factual, much like this one. However, slightly more than one hun-
dred epitaphs express emotion,l9 At Saint-Eucharius, which Handley has twice. 24
The northern cemetery, centered on the churches of Saint-Paulin and
shown was tl1e more popular cemetery during the late fourtl1 and early fifth
Saint-Maximin, grew in popularity as the cult at the south end of the city
centuries, witl1 a falling off in the fifth, seven emotion words were em-
waned.25 The emotion words on tl1e nortl1ern epitaphs were shaded just
ployed on fifty-eight stones, the most common by far being the endear-
slightly differently from their southern counterparts. Here the number of
ments carissimus (dearest), which appears fourteen times, and dulcissimus
stones employing emotional vocabulary was a bit smaller (fifty epitaphs)
(sweetest), which occurs twelve times. 20 In addition seven stones very likely
but the number of emotion words was somewhat larger: nine words all
once had one or tl1e other word but are now so fragmentary as to render the
told. The most striking differences between the cemeteries, however, have
reading uncertain. 21 Next most frequent is caritas) here clearly meaning love
to do with frequency of word usage. Dulcissimus (sweetest) was by far the
since it is invoked by relatives of the deceased as their motive for putting up
favored epithet, both for the deceased and (as we shall see) for the com-
tl1e epitaph; it appears nine times, while amor, the twin of caritas) appears
memorators; it appeared twenty times. 26 Carissimus (dearest), by contrast,
twice. 22 Felix (happy) is used once, andgaudium (joy) comes up either once
came up only three times.27 Caritas (love) was used very much as in the
or twice, depending on whether one reads the word "GAUDi" on a very
south end of the city, with nine appearances, seconded by amor (love),
which came up twice.28 Quite new was the northern cemetery's emphasis on
r8. RICG I, no. 45 The editor comments (p. 195) that the formula "conforme au schema dolor (sorrow) and other words of mourning-while eliminating all words
stereotype de Saint-Mathias n;' i.e., of one of its cemetery's engraving workshops. In this and of joy. Sorrow (dolor and its variants, especially its verbal forms) itself oc-
subsequent quotations of epitaphs, I shall not normally signal editorial indications of ellipses, curred eight times, while one particularly feeling (if fragmentary) epitaph
conjectural additions, etc. evoked lamentation (planctis non plangat) and the tears wrung by death
19. The number cannot be specified completely, not only because new epitaphs are con-
(mors jlenda).29 Two epitaphs in this cemetery referred to consolation (sola-
stantly being discovered but also because the fragmentary condition of the inscriptions and
the ambiguity of their words sometimes make tl1e reconstruction of the text a matter of
men), while one saw Hell "raging" (Tartarus furens). 30
guesswork. As an example of tl1e latter, Gose, no. 422, interprets the epitaph for Elpidia as
Were there two emotional communities at Trier, one using the northern
"Hie requiescit in pace Elpidia, qui vixit plus menus annus XL. cams conjux suus titulum po- cemetery, the other tl1e southern? It seems unlikely. As we shall see, in both
suit" (Here Elpidia rests in peace, who lived more or less 40 years; her dear husband put up places the epitaphs emphasized family relationships, whetl1er or not they ex-
her epitaph), but RICG I, no. n9, takes Cams to be tl1e name of the husband. Fragments are
extremely difficult to interpret: is Gose, no. 514, right to reconstmct " ... MA SORO~' as
23. Felix is in Gose, no. 19;gaudium (or variants) is in RICG I, nos. 19, 89 (where it may
"dulcissi/MA SORO~' (i.e., dulcissima soror, "very sweet sister;' the majuscules here indicat-
ing the letters that are certain)? Dulcissimus is very common in these epitaphs, as we shall see, refer to the name Gaudi/Gaudilla).

but "carissi/MA SORO~' is also a possible reconstruction (see RICG I, no. 139, which has 24. RICG I, nos. sS, 74
25. Handley, "Beyond Hagiography;' p. I97
conjux carissima), and anotl1er possibility is a proper name, such as "Euony/MA SOROR;' as
26. Dulcissimus appears in RICG I, nos. ro3, nr, n8, 120, 138, 143, 156, 159, r64, r69, 170,
in RICG I, no. 94.
176, 178 (twice), r82, 189; Gose, nos. 415, 533, 544, 6oob.
20. Carissimus (in various forms and spellings, including karus) appears inRJCG I, nos. 4,
27. Carissimus appears in RICG I, nos. 139, 142, 144. Eitl1er carissimus or dulcissimus is pos-
24, 28, 32a, 46, 49, 53, 59, 64, 71, 75; Gose, nos. 75, 309, 327. Dulcissimus (variously spelled) ap-
sible to fill out the letters that remain in Gose, nos. 485, 503.
pears in RICG I, nos. 13b, 26, 27, 30, 35, 39, 40, 55, 83, 91; Gose, nos. 87, 132.
28. Caritas is in RICG I, nos. 94, 149, rsr, r62, 183, 187; Gose, nos. 434, 451, 452; for amor
21. The fragmentary stones are RICG I, no. 6; Gose 8, 134, 169, 170, 171, 172. Consider the
latter, for example, which reads " ... SIME .. ?' Gose suggests "caris/SIME;' but see RICG I, nos. 135, I47
29. For dolor (and its variants) seeRJCG I, nos. ns, 122,133,140, 167, 193; Merten, no. 39;
"dulcis/SIME" seems possible as well.
Gose, no. 438. The epitaph tl1at evokes plangent feelings is RICG I, no. 194A.
22. Caritas is inRJCG I, nos. r, 30, 47, 55, 57, 62, 67, 68; Gose no. 59; amor is inRJCG I, no.
30. For solamen, see RICG I, nos. 192, 196 (probably); for Tartarus forens, see no. 170.
87, and in Gose, no. 28.

Confronting Death { 65
64 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
plicitly expressed feelings. The differences between the "emotional styles" of put up by parents on behalf of a child. 34 "Here lies in peace the sweetest
the cemeteries seem best explained by changes over time: the more plangent child [infas dulcissima ], Arablia, his daughter, who lived 7 years, ... months
epitaphs were largely from a later period. Dating the Trier epitaphs must al- and ro days; Posidonius, her fatl1er, put up this epitaph, in peace;' reads one
ways be a "best guess" because no dating clauses were used. That said, at the relatively typical inscription. 35 Or: "Leo lies here in peace; he lived for one
northern cemetery eighteen inscriptions using emotion words that can be year and 40 days; for their very dear son [filio charissimo ], his parents put up
dated precisely enough are from tl1e period before 500, while eleven are [this epitaph]?'36 Sometimes these sentiments were reinforced by a word for
from the sixth century and later. 31 Three of the epitaphs using dolor come love: "Here rests the very sweet child [infans dulcissima] Lupantia, in peace
from the first period, three from the second, which also saw the epitaph [and] faithful [fidelis ], who lived 3 years, 5 months, IS days. Treverius, her fa-
about mourning (planctis non plangat). Thus, before 500, I7 percent of the ther, for love [pro caritatem] put up this epitaph for his daughter?' 37
epitaphs evoked sorrow, while after that date 36 percent did so. Compare Mark Handley has pointed out that child commemoration at Trier was
these numbers with those from the southern cemetery of Saint Eucharius, "far higher than elsewhere in GauL"3 8 We now know that the Treveri not
where twenty-seven epitaphs came from the earlier period, but only six from only put up epitaphs for their children but sometimes paid for an extra
after 500. 32 Handley has shown that people were moving their allegiance to word or two to indicate nearness, dearness, and feeling. But if it was norma-
the northern cemetery; now we see that a subtle transformation in emo- dye among certain parents to express affection for their children, husbands
tional tenor-more intense, more plangent-was part of that change. I sug- and wives were only slightly less demonstrative. Of the fifty-six epitaphs
gest that this is one reason why dulcissimus came to be used more frequently using carissimusjdulcissimus) fifteen (or 27 percent) were put up by spouses.
than carissimus: although the words are essentially synonymous, the newly Endearments were also typically applied to the bereaved, as though the
intense emotional style in the north favored the more sentimental word, feelings of the deceased were known and needed to be acknowledged:
based on the adjective dulcis (sweet). 33 In chapter 4 we shall see more evi- "Here rests Merabaudis in peace, who lived I year and n months; her very
dence of the popularity of dulcedo (sweetness) in the sixtl1 century. I suggest sweet parents [patris dulcissimi] put up this epitaph?'39 Or again, this time in
that the Trier epitaphs from both nortl1ern and southern cemeteries were the instance of children honoring tl1eir mother: "Here Concordia lies in
the product of one community that underwent gradual transformation over peace, who lived more or less 65 years; ~oncordius and Concordialis, her
time in tandem with changes in cultic practices. very sweet children [filii dulcissimi] put up tl1is epitaph?'40 The wife of Scot-
Who paid for cutting the extra letters of dulcissimus or carissimus) by far tus, the deceased, was "very sweet" to him: "To the one who reposes well
the most frequent emotion terms? The short answer is that close relatives here, Scottus, who lived 65 years, his very sweet spous~ [cojux dulcissima]
did so. But greater precision is possible. Of the fifty-six epitaphs using caris- put up this epitaph for love [pro caritatem]; Scottus, peace be with you!"41
simusjdulcissimus in the two cemeteries, at least nineteen (34 percent) were The wife of the dead Vitalis was "very dear": "Here rests Vitalis, who lived

31. From before the year soo: RICG I, nos. 94, I03, nr, n8, 120, 133, 139, 140, 142, 143, 149, rsr, 34. I say "at least nineteen" because some of the inscriptions are too fragmentary to deter-

159, r62, r67, 176, 192, 196; from after soo: nos. ns, 122, 135, 138, 147, rs6, 170, 178, r83, 193, 194. mine who has died and who has put up the stone. See the observations of Gauthier in RICG
32. From before the year soo: RICG I, nos. 4, 6, r3b, 19, 24, 26, 28, 30, pa, 35, 39, 40, 46, I, pp. 47-48. King, "Commemoration of Infants;' p. I4I, finds, by contrast, that dulcissimus
47, 49, 53, 55, 57, 58, 59, 62, 64, 67, 68, 74, 83, 87; from after soo: nos. r, 27, 71, 75, 89, 91. alone "forms 46.r percent of the total" of Roman inscriptions put up for infants, with bene-
33 Hanne Sigismund Nielsen suggests that in ancient Rome carissimus was a general term merens (well-deserving) following at 23% and carissimus at 13.4%.
of endearment that could be applied to spouses as well as children, while dulcissimus was most 35 RICG I, no. ro3.
often used for a child; Nielsen, "Interpreting Epithets in Roman Epitaphs;' in The Roman 36. RICG I, no. 28.
Family in Italy: Status) Sentiment) Space) ed. Beryl Rawson and Paul Weaver (Canberra, 1997), 37 RICG I, no. 30.
pp. 169-204, esp. pp. 190-93. Because these terms were also used at Trier to describe the com- 38. Handley, Death) Society and Culture) p. 7!.
memorators themselves (see the discussion at note 39 below) comparisons with Rome are 39 RICG I, no. 40.
problematic. Certainly it is clear that dulcissimus was at least sometimes applied to spouses, as 40. RICG I, no. qb.
in RICG I, nos. 26, 32a, 39, nr, 138, 170, 189, 544. 4r. RICG I, no. 55

66 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 67


85 years; he served in the ]oviani Seniores [a military corps] for 40 years; his nor coeternal witl1 the Father-Clermont, like other Catl1olic cities, was al-
very dear wife [conjux karissima] put up this epitaph?'42 The dead Perses's lowed to pursue its own religious agenda. 47 After Clovis (d. sn ), Icing of tl1e
husband was equally dear: "Perses rests here in peace, who lived 45 years; Franks, conquered the Visigoths in 507, he sent his oldest son, Theuderic (d.
her very dear husband [conjux karissimus] put up this epitaph?'43 533), to talce Clermont along with Albi and Rodez. Under Theuderic, Cler-
At Trier, the affections of both the departed and the living were acknowl- mont became part of the northeastern Franlcish lcingdom (eventually called
edged. To be sure, some emotion words were associated with forces outside Austrasia), which also embraced Trier. Thus Trier and Clermont, despite
the family: it was Tartarus that raged (furens) rather than the deceased or the their distance from each other, were "sister" cities. They were also sometimes
bereaved, andgaudium referred to heaven, not earthly life.44 But in other competitive. Theuderic, who became Icing upon tl1e death of Clovis, "re-
cases people's feelings were very much at center stage. "Here is buried a formed" Trier's clergy by sending in replacements from Clermont. 48 Bishop
woman of senatorial rank, who merited, by the mercy of God, not to know Gregory of Tours (d. ea. 594), for his part, contributed to Trier's fame by
about the death of her daughter which soon followed [her own] in peace; claiming that its bishop Nicetius had been the savior of a man from Cler-
this consolation [solamen] was accorded to her?'45 mont.49 In tl1e seventh century, Clermont became part of the unified Icing-
Thus affection was a privileged emotion at Trier, above all the affection dam ofClothar II (d. 629), which embraced Austrasia, Neustria, and Bur-
between children and parents and, to a slightly lesser extent, between hus- gundy. But because it was traditionally part of Austrasia alone, when
bands and wives. 46 That affection, as the inscriptions make very clear, went in Clothar's son Dagobert became king of Austrasia, Clermont once again was
both directions. Even the dead could still feel tl1e dearness and the sweetness tied to that particular kingdom. so (For all of these kings, see table 7)
of those left behind. The stones at Trier reveal to us, first, a certain kind of af- The evidence from the Christian funeral inscriptions, scant as it is, sug-
fectionate sensibility and, second, subtle changes in that sensibility over time. gests an emotional community at Clermont quite different from the one at
Trier. This is true of both the emotional repertory and the contexts in which
"OH, GREEDY DEATH": IMPERSONAL EMOTIONS AT CLERMONT the words were used (see table 4). Admittedly only six epitaphs at Clermont
Clermont, the capital city of the Auvergne in what is today south central used ~y emotion word whatever. 51 Nevertheless, some observations may
France, came under Visigothic rule in 475. Although the Visigoths were
Arian- a heretical form of Christianity that held that Christ was not equal to 47. On Clermont under the Arians, see Ian Wood, The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751
(London, I994), pp. r6-r9. On the topography of Clermont, see TCCG: Clermont, pp. 27-
40, and P.-F. Fournier, "Clermont-Ferrand au VIe siecle. Recherches sur la topographic de la
42. RICG I, no. 71.
ville;' Bibliotheque de l'Eeole des Chartes I28 (I970): 273-344.
43. RICG I, no. 49.
48. Gregory ofTours Liber Vitae Patrum 6.2, MGH SRM I/2 (rev. ed., Hannover, I969)
44. For Tartarus furens, see RICG I, no. r7o. Note that, although this is part of a line de- (hereafter Greg. Tur., VP), p. 231.
rived largely from a sermon of Maximus ofTurin (d. ea. 4I5 ), the author of the epitaph added
49 Ibid., I7.5, PP 282-83.
the word furens; see Gauthier's remarks, p. 429. RICG I, no. r9, does speak of the donor of so. See the remarks on Clermont's position vis-a-vis Austrasia in Late Merovingian France:
the stone asgaudens (rejoicing). But he is a bishop, the epitaph is for the first two bishops of History and Hagiography, 640-720, ed. and trans. Paul Fouracre and Richard A. Gerberding
Trier (thus put up long after their deaths), and he is rejoicing because he has given their bod- (Manchester, I996), pp. 268-70. For an overview of the church and the cult of saints at Cler-
ies a resting place for the promised resurrection.
mont see Ian Wood, "Constructing Cults in Early Medieval France: Local Saints and
45. RICG I, no. r92.
Churches in Burgundy and the Auvergne 400-rooo;' in Local Saints and Local Churches in the
46. It should go without saying that this flies in the face of the thesis of Philippe Aries, Early Medieval West, ed. Alan Thacker and Richard Sharpe (Oxford, 2002), pp. rss-87, and
Centuries of Childhood, trans. Robert Baldick (New York, r962), to the effect that medieval idem, "The Ecclesiastical Politics of Merovingian Clermont;' in Ideal and Reality in Frankish
people did not love their children. It is only one final nail in that thesis's coffin, since recent andAnglo-Saxon Society: Studies Presented to J M. Wallace-Hadrill, ed. Patrick Wormald, Don-
studies have all shown its inadequacies. For good recent reviews of the issue, see Pauline aid Bullough, and Roger Collins (Oxford, r983), pp. 34-57.
Stafford, "Parents and Children in the Early Middle Ages;' Early Medieval Europe ro (2oor): sr. RICG, vol. VIII, Aquitaine premiere, ed. Fran<;oise Prevot (Paris, I997) (hereafter RICG
257-7r, and Barbara A. Hanawalt, "Medievalists and the Study of Childhood;' Speculum 77 VIII), nos r6, r7, 2r, 23, 34, 35. The extant repertoty of Clermont's epitaphs is in RICG VIII,
(2002): 440-60.
nos. rs-36. I eliminate nos. 20 and 22 because d1ey are known only as literary epitaphs and

68 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 69


TABLE 4. Emotion Words at Trier and Clermont Compared The emotion words used at Clermont were highly charged. There were
even some exclamations: ha!, hem!, ho!, suggesting a bursting heart (the ac-
Trier Clermont tual meanings of the words being vague, but their expressivity without
amor (love) amator (lover) question). Thus, while "the damp earth consumes the perishable body, nev-
carusjcarissimus (dear/dearest) ertheless he does not occupy the hollows of the sepulcher but, ha!, [rather]
caritas (love) the heavens, he whom Justice made happy [frlicem] [though] buried in this
cupidus (greedy) tomb. Levite of the Lord, oh [hem!] Innocentius- his name comes from his
dolerejdolor (sorrow) dolor (sorrow) grandfather-is blessed in his way of life [morebus]?' 54 Or, in another epi-
dulcissimus (sweetest)
taph: "Oh [ho] greedy death, ... sorrow [dolur] to the family?' 55
ftlix (happy) ftlix (happy) Though the parents of a child probably put up this latter epitaph, at Cler-
ftere (to weep) mont, the commemorators never said who they were, nor did they say how
fur ere (to rage) Juror (rage) they related to the deceased. Instead the emotions in the cemeteries of Cler-
gauderejgaudium (to rejoice/joy) mont were largely impersonal or even nonhuman. To be sure, we have just
ha! hem! ho! (ha, ah, oh) seen that Innocentius was happy in heaven. And there was one "lover:' Vin-
invidus (envious) comalus. Probably a cleric, his stone is very mutilated, but the editor of the
lacrimae (tears) inscription, Fran<;oise Prevot, guesses that he was a "lover of the poor"
planctus (lamentation) (AMATU/r pauperum)-the material in lowercase represents her conjec-
so/amen (solace)
ture- and, more certainly ("lover" is used twice on this one stone), a "lover
of the church" (AMATUR ECLjesiae).56 But, as we have seen, on the in-
scription for the child the entity that was "greedy'' was not a person but
be made. Terms of endearment never appeared. There were no "very sweet" rather Death and the source of parental sorrow: "Oh, greedy Death, who
children, no "dearest" spouses. Indeed, there were very few epitaphs alto- snatches life from litde ones, ... sorrow to the family?' 57 Nor did greed. ex-
gether. Gregory of Tours, a native of the region, reported that the tombs in haust the emotional life of Death, for in the epitaph for a deacon named
the church of St. Venerandus at Clermont were covered with sculpted
scenes from the New Testament, but he had seen only one with an inscrip-
de ]'epouse dans !'epigraphic chretienne lyonnaise aux VI' et VII' siecles;' in La Femme au
tion: "To Galla of blessed memory?' 52 Having spent part of his boyhood in
MoyenAge, ed. Michel Rouche and Jean Heuclin (Maubeuge, 1990 ), pp. 139-4-5. On Gregory
Lyon, where epitaphs were far more common, Gregory consoled himself
ofTours's childhood first at Clermont and later at Lyon, see Raymond van Dam, Saints and
with the thought that the names must be known in heaven. 53 Their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul (Princeton, 1993), pp. 52-55, though recently the length of
his residence at Lyon has been brought into question by Martin Heinzelmann, Gregory of
may not have been inscribed and placed in a cemetety. Because there are so few epitaphs in Tours: History and Society in the Sixth Century, trans. Christopher Carroll (Cambridge, 2001),
toto from Clermont, I could not restrict the sample to specific cemeteries. p.32.
52. Gregory of Tours, Liber ingloria confessorum 34-35, MGH SRM I/2 (hereafter Greg. 54- RJCG VIII, no. r6: "[Corpus?] fragele umeda terra sumit, non tenit ad [tamen?] hie
Tur., GC), p. 319. The inscription for Galla is RICG VIII, no. 15. She may have been Gregory's antra sepulcri sed ha! eelos quem justa [fecerunt?] felicem, condetum hoc tom~lo. Levita do-
relation, since he had an uncle named Gallus, a relatively rare name. mini [?] hem Innocencius-illi nomen ad avo protra[ ctum?] beatus in morebus?' The editor
53 Greg. Tur., GC 35, p. 320. For the inscriptions of Lyon, it is still necessary to consult In- remarks that "justa" "is employed not in the sense of'just works' but rather ofJustice in gen-
scriptions chretiennes de la Gaule anteneures au VIII' siecle, ed. Edmond Le Blant, 2 vols. (Paris, eral" (p. !02).
1856, 1865), vol. r, nos. 15-86A, vol. 2, nos. 663-69, and Nouveau receuil des inscriptions chreti- 55. RICG VIII, no. 35 For the text see note 57 below.
ennes de la Gaule anterieures au VIII' siecle, ed. Edmond Le Blant (Paris, 1892), nos. 3- 18. 56. RICG VIII, no. 34
RICG XVI on the Lyonnais is being prepared by Marie-Helene Soulet; see her preliminary 57 RJCG VIII, no. 35: "Ho mors cupeta [abstu?]let parvolis vita[ m?] [ ... ]gis parentibus
article on the subject of conjugal feeling in these epitaphs in "L'image de J'an1our conjugal et dolu[r? ... o?]lenus in Christi no[ mine]?' Probably "-lenus" is the fragment of a name.

70 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 71


Emellio, Death was "envious" (inveda) and therefore stole his life away.ss province.64 In the 430s it came under the control of the Burgundians, who
The epitaph for the "devout" Georgia claimed that she could have selected acted on the whole as defenders of the empire. When emperors ceased to
from many suitors, but instead she chose God "in a happier marriage" ifeli- exist in the West (476), Gundobad (d. 516) stayed on as Icing of the Burgun-
ciore toro). 59 Human, but nevertheless impersonal are the emotions in the dians. He had been an emperor-maker and had important relations with
epitaph for Sidonius Apollinaris himsel He gave laws to soften "barbarian Italy and Byzantium, but, unlike the Romans, he did not use Vienne as his
fury'' (barbarico furori) and did much else to bring public peace. Thus "who- capital, favoring instead Lyon and Chalon-sur-Sa6ne. 65 However, Vienne
ever comes here to implore God with tears [cum lacrimis]"should pour out remained important as a Catholic religious center. Avitus, bishop ofVienne
prayers at his tomb. 60 (ea. 494-ca. 518), was an advisor to the Burgundian lcings and an important
Many of these conceits-such as the personification of death -are classi- leader of the episcopal community. 66 Although the Icing himself was an
cal. 61 That does not make them the less telling. Conceits have to malce some Arian Christian, he fully tolerated Catholicism, and many members of his
sense to be used. The "normal" epitaph at Clermont-if"normal" may be family, including his son Sigismund, who succeeded him in sr6, were Cath-
said of a place that rarely put up an epitaph! -was one like that for Cerva: olic. Thus Vienne flourished as a Catholic city under the Burgundians, and
"In this tomb rests Cerva of good memory, who lived in peace 35 years. She when Burgundy was conquered by the Franks in 534 it continued to thrive.
departed the day before the kalends ofJuly;''62 It was a key center of monasticism in the late sixth century and remained an
Most of the epitaphs at Clermont that may be dated appear to come important producer of ecclesiastical manuscripts in the seventh. 67
from the seventh century. 63 Four of the six "emotional" epitaphs are from There were three important Christian cemeteries at Vienne, The one at
that century. Were it not for the epitaph for Sidonius, there would be noth- Saint-Gervais was just south of the city; that near the church of Saint-Severe
ing for the fifth century, while Georgia's "happier marriage" is our only was to the north; and the most important of the cemeteries, in the shadow
sample for the sixth. We may say, then, that at Clermont people on the of the church of Saint-Pierre, was southwest of the city's walls. 68 All told, we
whole were taciturn when confronting death, at least publicly. They cared have about a hundred inscriptions from these cemeteries. 69
about the dead: why else would they have entombed them in sculpted There is a lushness to the emotions repertory at Vienne that we have not
stone? But they were wary of words. In the seventh century, when they
found a voice, the emotions they expressed were, by comparison with those 64. On its provincial status, see Andre Pelletier, "Vienne et la reorganisation provinciale de
at Trier, less personal and affectionate. They imagined death as greedy and la Gaule au Bas-Empire;' Latomus 26 (1967): 491-99.
envious, the bringer of sorrow. 65. For backgronnd on Vienne, seeAvitus ofVienne: Letters and Seleeted Prose, ed, and trans.
Danuta Shanzer and Ian Wood (Liverpool, 2002), esp. pp. 13-27; TCCG, vol. 3: Provinces ec-

"FEARING PROSPERITY, LAUGHING AT ADVERSITY": ctesiastiques de Vienne et d'Arles, ed. Jacques Biarne (Paris, 1986), pp. 13-15, 17-35 (hereafter
TCCG: Vienne); Jean-Fran<;:ois Reynaud, '"Vienne la Sainte' au moyen-age;' Archeologia 88
HEAVENLY EMOTIONS AT VIENNE
(!975): 44-54
Under Rome's rule in the fourth century, Vienne, a city on the Rhone River 66. His was the "dominant voice" at the Council ofEpaon (517), for example: seeAvitus of
in what is today southeastern France, was the capital city of a Gallic Vienne, ed. and trans. Shanzer and Wood, p. IO.
67. Wood, Merovingian Kingdoms, p. 252.
sS. RICG VIII, no. 23. 68. For a summary of the status quaestionis regarding Saint-Pierre, see Mor)ique Jannet-
59 RICG VIII, no. 17. She is here called "Christi ... divota" (dedicated to Christ). Greg. Vallat, "L'organisation spatiale des cimetieres Saint-Pierre et Saint-Georges de Vienne (IVe-
Tur., GC 33, p. 318, speaks of a "puella ... devota Deo" (girl dedicated to God) at Clermont XVIIIe siecle);' inArchiologie du cimetiere chritien, A~tes du 2e colloque A.R.C.H.E.A. (Asso-
named Georgia; when she died, her funeral cortege was miraculously accompanied by a flock ciation en Region Centre pour l'Histoire et l'Archeologie), ed. Henri Galinie and Elisabeth
of doves. Zadora-Rio (Tours, 1996), pp. I2S-37
6o. RICG VIII, no. 21. 69. Those forthe cemetery of Saint-Gervais are RICG, vol. 15: Viennoise du Nord, ed. Henri
6I. See the remarks of the editor, RICG VIII, pp. 63-65. I. Marrou and Fran<;:oise Descombes (Paris, 1985) (hereafter RICG XV), nos. 39-63 (a total of
62. RICG VIII, no. 32. twenty-four inscriptions); for the cemetery of Saint-Severe, ibid., nos. 64-74 (ten inscrip-
63. That is, ten epitaphs out of sixteen. tions); for the cemetery of Saint-Pierre, ibid., nos. 75-141, of which no. 98 has two faces, a

72 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 73


TABLE 5. Emotion Words in Vienne Inscriptions nus of good memory reposes in peace, who lived around 40 years. He died
Emotion word in peace the 3d day of the Kalends of August, the 17th year after the consulate
RICGXV, no.
amarejamor (to love; love) of Basil, a man of senatorial rank, and the [numbers missing] year of the in-
73, SI, 99
carus (dear) diction."70 As at Clermont, many burials went without written commemo-
41
caritas (love) ration altogether.
69, 72, II2, 121
diligere (to love) But when an epitaph did include emotions at Vienne, it often indulged
II2, 121, 140
dolerejdolor (to sorrow; sorrow) in more than one. The inscription for Bishop Avitus, for example, had seven
42, 99, IIS
ftlix (happy) emotion words covering the gamut of feeling from sorrow to love and fear:
SI, 95
flerejdefterelfietus (to weep; weeping) "whoever you may be who sees the sad [mestificum] honor of this tomb ...
SI, 99, nS
Juror (rage) will weep [deflebis] .. .. He terrifies by loving [amando terret]."71 Burial
97
gaudere/gaudium (to rejoice; joy) place of bishops, the church of Saint-Pierre boasted four episcopal epitaphs,
92, 99, IOI, IIS
gemere (to groan) most of them full of emotional content. 72 Do these skew our results? Would
97, IOI
ingemere (to bewail) Vienne seem dry and emotionless without its passionate bishops and their
99
invidus (envious) emotive followers? Table 6 lists the emotion words that result when the
104
lacrimae (tears) episcopal inscriptions are omitted.
92, 97, IOI
laetus (joyful) This is still a rich haul. At Trier the stonecutters had a repertory of eleven
99
levamen (consolation) emotion words; at Clermont it was down to seven (not counting the excla-
97
metuere (to fear) mations). At Vienne, however, a paltry sixteen non-episcopal tombs yield a
S2, 96
maerorjmaestusjmaestijicare total of fourteen emotion words. The episcopal sepulchers may have magni-
SI, 99
(mourning; sad; to make sad) fied the pattern, but they did not distort it: if an epitaph at Vienne talked
planctus (lamentation) about feelings, then it might well (375 percent of the time) do so more than
IOI
ridere (to laugh) once. The metrical inscription for Sylvia is the lushest of these instances. Al-
S2, 96
solamen (consolation) though, as was normal at Vienne, there is no indication of who put up the
SI, 99
terrere (to frighten) epitaph, nevertheless the emotional focus of the inscription is her feelings
SI
timere (to fear) about her children and theirs about her. Sylvia "rejoiced [gaudebat] to have
91, 120
tremere (to tremble) recovered her ancestors in her children?' One had become a priest, another
99
tristis (sad) achieved the title of patricius. These children were not indifferent to their
SI
mother. The epitaph concludes: "Let her children cease to be troubled by
tears and lamentation [lacrimis planctusque]. It is not right to groan [gemere]
about that which ought to be celebrated?'73 In this way, the emotions of the
seen elsewhere. The full panoply may be seen in table 5. However, let us not moment were at one and the same time recognized and downgraded as they
were absorbed into the Augustinian world view; they were redirected from
~ow this emo~ional exuberance to mislead us into thinking that people at
Vten~e revele~ m emotional outpourings. Only twenty of the epitaphs there
c~ntam emotton words. As at Clermont and Trier, nonemotional inscrip- 70. RICG XV, no. 68.
tiOns were favored- if inscriptions were wanted at all: "In this tomb Fluri- 7r. RICG XV, no. Sr.
72. RICG XV, nos. Sr (for Avims), 95 (for Pantagathus), 97 (for Hesychius), 99 (for Na-
matius ). No. 95 is the exception, as it contains only one emotion word,felix, to describe Pan-
and b, and. thus must be considered twice, while no. 87 is probably not a fimeral epitaph at all tagathus's happiness in his descendants.
and should thus not be counted (resulting in a total of sixty-six inscriptions). 73- RICG XV, no. ror.

74} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 75


TABLE 6. Emotion Words in Non-Episcopal Vienne Inscriptions Was this emotional community-one that rejected emotions unless di-
rected heavenward-the product of a siege mentality? Has too little been
Emotion word RICG VIII, no.
made of the pressures Catholics may have felt in a kingdom where the king
amare (to love) 73
was Arian? It is unlikely. Almost all of tl1e epitaphs that contain emotion
caritas (love) 69, 72, II2, 121
words date from the sixth century, when Vienne was firmly under Catholic
carus (dear) 41
kings. 77 At Vienne, if people recognized emotions in connection with
diligere (to love) II2, 140
death-or, at least, were willing to publicize them-it was in the sixth cen-
dolerejdolor (to sorrow; sorrow) 42, n8
tury. And if they did so, they had a colorful palette of emotion words from
fiere (to weep) n8
which to choose, including seven words for sorrow, tears, and lamentation.
gaudere/gaudium (to rejoice; joy) 92, 101, n8
They recognized death's pain, but they deflected it, to speak of the resurrec-
gemere (to groan) 101
tion: "Father, don't be sorrowful [ne doleas]; mother, you too stop weeping
invidus (envious) !04
fflere desiste]: your child has the joys [gaudia] of eternal life.''78 They ac-
lacrimae (tears) 92, 101
knowledged the force of love, and they turned it into a virtue rather than a
metuere (to fear) 82, 96
feeling: "In this tomb rests [the deceased], a priest, ... pure in faith, ...
planctus (lamentation) !01
kind ... beloved [amatus].''79
ridere (to laugh) 82, 96
timere (to fear) 91, 120
The epitaphs for the dead suggest that there were at least three different
emotional communities in Gaul before the eighth century. Altl1ough the
people who commissioned the gravestones were all Christians (hence at
worldly things to celestial, and death was transformed from a sad to a happy least professedly despising the world and all positive feelings for it) and
event. shared tl1e same basic emotional vocabulary, they drew upon, used, and put
Thus, in the few epitaphs at Vienne where emotions came into play, together in different ways the potential repertory of emotional responses to
Christian goals predominated. Even in the simplest case, where only the an- death that the cultural constraints of religion and word supplies permitted.
odyne carus appeared, the word was used to reinforce a picture of Christian At Trier the emphasis was on words of affection in the context (we can
virtue: "[The deceased], dear [cara] to all, dutiful [pia] to the poor, kind [be- see from Clermont and Vienne how rare it was!) of family membership:
nigna] to slaves.'' 74 While at Trier the word "love" (caritas) amor) referred to motl1ers, fathers, husbands, wives, and children named themselves right on
the family members motive for putting up an epitaph, at Vienne love meant the tombstone. The inscriptions at Trier in effect recreated family circles,
Christian charity: "In this tomb rests in peace the servant of God Dulcitia of and this fact did not change over the course of three centuries. But the emo-
good memory, a consecrated virgin [sanctimonialis], of excellent morals, tion words at Trier became more intense, a transformation comparable to
profuse good will, enormous love [charitate lawissima ].'' 75 When an epitaph one at Vienne, where emotion words were virtually absent from epitaphs
at Vienne used the verb "to laugh:' it was not for joy but to ridicule the until the sixth century. At Vienne emotions were then immediately tied to
world: "[Celsa] repudiated worldly things and subjected her flesh to the otherworldly values, whereas at Trier they remained (insofar as 9ur small
cross, and fearing [maetuens] prosperity, she always laughed at [ridens] ad- sample allows us to make any generalization at all) connected to family feel-
versity.''76

7+ RICG XV, no. 4-r. 77 RICG XV, no. 72, is fifth century; nos. 4-1, 4-2, 69, 73, 81, 82, 91, 92, 95, 96, 97, 99, IOI,
75. RICG XV, no. 69. II2, H8, 120, 121, and 14-0 are sixth century; no. 104- is seventh century.
76. RICG XV, no. 82. C also no. 96. On love of the world and fear of death, see Rebillard, 78. RICG XV, no. H8.
''In hora mortis/' chap. 3 79. RICG XV, no. 73-

76 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Confronting Death { 77


ing. Clermont shows us that personification and depersonalization was still
another mode of managing and expressing feeling.
Gallic epitaphs may thus provide a glimpse into the variety of ways in
which ancient and early Christian religious and emotive traditions meshed,
at least around the issue of death. But death is only one potentially emo-
tional moment in life. To see others, to see a whole panoply of issues and the
ways in which one extraordinarily sensitive observer thought and felt about
them, again drawing upon the religious and emotive traditions of antiquity,
we turn now to Rome and to its perhaps most famous early medieval pope: Born in Rome of a prominent family with strong links to the church and a
Gregory the Great. tradition of ascetic piety, Pope Gregory the Great (590-604) first threw
himself into civic duties and then retired, still at Rome, to a monastery
dedicated to St. Andrew on the Caelian Hill, one of seven monastic houses
that he founded on his family property at Rome and Palermo. 1 When re-
called from the monastic life to become papal ambassador to the imperial
court at Constantinople, Gregory began the first of his voluminous exeget-
ical writings, the Moralia in Job. Mter becoming pope in 590, against his
will (or so he protested), he turned energetically to the practical tasks at
hand. We learn from his extant letters (over eight hundred have survived,
only a small fraction of the original number) that he was keen to manage
the papal patrimonies, oversee the church hierarchy in Italy, and oil the
lines of communication between himself and other ruling courts. 2 In the
very first months of his papacy he wrote a handbook for bishops, the Pas-
toral Rule. Meanwhile, he continued his Moralia) which he finished in 591.
He wrote forty Homilies on the Gospels around the same time and worked as-
siduously on twenty-two Homilies on the Book of Ezechiel) completed at last
in 6oi. 3 In between, amidst other exegetical writings that today exist only
in fragments, he completed four books of Dialogues for "those who;' as he
put it, "are fired up with love for the heavenly fatherland more by concrete

r. On the basic facts of Gregory's life, thought, times, and policies, see Robert A. Markus,
Gregory the Great and His World (Cambridge, 1997); Carole Straw, Gregory the Great, Authors
of the Middle Ages, Historical and Religious Writers of the Latin West, vol. 4, no. 12 (Alder-
shot, 1996), pp. r-72; and Sofia Boesch Gajano, Gregorio Magno. Alle origini del Medioevo
(Rome, 2004). I am grateful to Elisabeth Zadora-Rio and Bruno Judic for providing me
with a preliminary bibliography on (respectively) the site of Gregory's monastery and Gre-
gory's writings.
2. Gregmy I, Registrum Epistularum, ed. Dag Norberg, CCSL 140 and 14oA (Turnhout,
1982). On the fraction of letters that this represents, see Markus, Gregory, pp. 206-8.
3. Paul Meyvaert, "The Date ofGregory the Great's Commentaries on the Canticle of Can-
ticles and on r Kings;' Sacris Erudiri 23 (1979): 201 n. 25.

78 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


examples than by sermons?'4 In the Dialogues he painted an Italia sacra, a without effect. He commanded the recognition of certain people in his own
landscape of raging plague, marauding armies, and errant souls, all calmed day-ordinarily male, clerical, and Roman-and they were also, in large
by serene, wonder-working monks. 5 part, the audience for his writings. It was a rarified group, no doubt; but it
Gregory was the most prolific writer of his age. This in itself malces him was not, for all that, any more unique than the mourning parents ofTrier.
irresistible for a historian of emotion. Did Gregory recognize emotions? Unlike those parents, however, Gregory had a mission. He spoke to his
What did he think of them? How did he express them (if he did)? The an- own community-the men with whom he surrounded himself-and he also
swers to these questions will occupy us throughout this chapter. But first it attempted to speak to others. His homilies, for example, were addressed to
is necessary to deal with a possible objection: that an analysis ofGregory de- worshipers at Roman churches. His letters were written to far-flung recipi-
flects us from our task of exploring emotional communities. With epitaphs ents. Gregory was not one to enter into other emotional worlds-those
we were able to look at collective responses to death in different venues. apart from his clerical colleagues-except to change and reform them; his
What can we say of one man? emotional involvement was pastoral. It was the role of the churchman- of
I maintain that Gregory allows us to see his emotional community. I in- Gregory-to recognize and work with others. But unlike an anthropologist
tend to explore Gregory not as a subject of psychohistory but rather as a who joins communities to observe and understand them, Gregory joined to
member of a community, even though we know about that community uplift and transform.
from him alone. No individual is isolated from his or her social context-or
contexts. This is very clear in Gregory's case, as he was a gregarious and so- EMOTIONS AS VICES
cial person. Whatever he wrote he addressed to others; and in those writ- We have already seen that Gregory drew on the "bad thoughts" and "vices"
ings he evoked a whole universe of human behavior, obligations, ideals, fol- elaborated by the desert Fathers and turned them into the battalion of the
lies, relations-and, at times, feelings. Should we treat Gregory's evocations Seven Deadly Sins. His list-vainglory (inanisgloria), envy (invidia), anger
of the world as purely imaginary? Only in part. All texts create their own (ira), sadness (tristitia), avarice (avaritia), gluttony (ventris ingluvies), and
universes. But we nevertheless have learned to use those texts to get at, if lust (luxuria), all rooted in pride (superbia)-dominated church thinking
not reality, then perceptions of reality. This is what I ask of Gregory's writ- for centuries.? The words need to be contextualized. When they appear-in
ings. I do not wish to argue that he was a "man of his times"; recent work theMoralia in ]ob-they are not singled out for historical stardom; they are
on Gregory has shown that his great popularity came after his lifetime, not simply invoked to illustrate, as Gregory often did, the "thoughts"-that is,
during it. 6 On the other hand, he was not a madman, spinning his wheels in Stoic terms, the "emotions"-that assail people. When explaining the pas-
sage ''And his possession was ... a family exceeding great'' in Job 1:3, Gre-
4. Gregory I, Dialogues r, pro!. 9, in Gregoire le Grand, Dialogues, ed. Adalbert de Vogiie,
gory took "family'' to mean the innumerable thoughts (cogitationes innu-
trru1s. Paul Antin, 3 vols., SC 251, 26o, 265 (Paris, 1978-80 ), 2:r6: "Et sunt nonnulli quos ad meras) that we must control under the domination of the mind (sub mentis
aiilorem patriae caelestis plus exempla quam praedicaiilenta succendunt?' On the corpus of dominatione). If they are out of our control, then they behave like the slaves
Gregory's writings and the authenticity of those that have been disputed, see the convenient of a household when the mistress is away, "neglecting their duties;' and
summaries in Markus, Gregory, pp. 14-r6; Conrad Leyser, Authority and Asceticism from Au- "confounding the right order ofliving" (ordinem vivendi confundunt). 8
gustine to Gregory the Great (Oxford, 2000 ), pp. 135-43; ru1d, for the latest word on the au- Building on Cassian's and Augustine's ideas about emotions, Gregory
thenticity of the Dialogues, Adalbert de Vogiie, "Gregoire le Grand est-ill'auteur des Dia-
elaborated on the theory of consent. Cogitations are first suggested to the
logues?" Revue d'histoire eccltfsiastique 99 ( 2004): 158-6r.
mind by the devil; if allowed to remain, they become a delight (delectatio) to
5. Sofia Boesch Gajano almost single-hmdedly rescued the Dialogues from scholarly ridi-
cule; Gajmo, "La proposta agiografica dei 'Dialogi' di Gregorio Magna;' Studi Medievali, ser. the flesh. Then the spirit consents to them and ultimately "hardens" around
terza, 21 (1980): 623-64. See now as well eadem, Gregorio Magno, esp. pt. 2.
6. Aim Thacker, "Memorializing Gregory the Great: The Origin md Trmsmission of a
Papal Cult in the Seventh and Early Eighth Centuries;' Early Medieval Europe 7 (1998): 59-84. 7 Gregory I,Moralia in Job 31.45.87, CCSL 143B, p. r6ro.
I am grateful to Tom Noble for this reference. 8. Ibid., !.30.42, CCSL I43, P 47

8o } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 8r


them out of pride, so that what was once a suggestion becomes a habit (con- mind, however subject to temptation, was never shaken.l 5 When Job curses
suetudo).9 the day he was born, Gregory says that his words are not those of someone
It is not easy to put a stop to this process. The mind is difficult to con- "moved by anger" (ira commoti) but rather of one "tranquil in doctrine"
trol. It begins by wishing to do justice, for example, but then, sneaking in (doctrina tranquilli). Job is not being emotional-or, more precisely, he has
"from the side" (ex latere), anger (ira) arrives; or the mind intends to be se- not succumbed to the "vice of emotion" (perturbationis vitio); he is simply
rious, but, again "from the side" sadness (tristitia) takes over, "and all the and correctly disseminating Christian teachings, whereby this world is dung
work that the mind begins with good intention is clouded over by a veil of and birth into it is rightly cursed.l 6
sorrow [velamine maeroris]." Similarly, a good deed, which should be ac- From this perspective, no emotion is good. Even love is suspect. When
companied by a "weight of gravity" (pondus gravitatis ), brings "immoderate Job's wife tells him to "bless God and die:' Gregory points out that the "an-
joy'' (laetitia immoderata) instead. 10 At other times the "unclean spirits:' en- cient adversary'' uses "those who are attached to us" (qui nobis adhaerent) to
vious (invidunt) of our heavenward gaze, "inflame the pure [mundas] make his case. This is why the bible warns, "Beware of thy own children"
thoughts of our mind with the burning of sexual desire [mentis nostrae cogi- (Ecclus. 32:26), and "Let every man take heed of his neighbor, and let him
tationes ardore libidinis]:' 11 In this way, even virtues bring vices in their not trust in any brother of his" (Jer. 9:4). Expelled from the "hearts of the
train. 12 good:' the devil uses those who are "very much loved" (valde diliguntur) as
Drawing on the tradition of the psychomachy, a mental battle that pitted his proxies; he speaks eloquently through the "alluring words" of those who
the virtues against the vices, Gregory saw the human mind at war. But are loved (amantur)J7
rather than celebrate the triumph of the virtues, as others writers were wont Even penance is problematic. It reminds us of bad deeds, and the result-
to do, Gregory emphasized impassivity. 13 The "raging enemy'' thought he ing "confusion fogs the mind with stirred-up thoughts fperturbatis cogita-
could "move" Job (eum moveri credidit) by bodily torments, but he was un- tionibus]:'We are confounded by "heavy sorrow l;gravi maerore]?'Indeed, "a
able to touch the emotions of Job's mind (passionem mentis).l4 Job is a crowd of thoughts clamors in our mind [animo]: sorrow [maeror] grinds us
Christian version of tl1e Stoic, unperturbed by the pre-emotions (which, as down, anxiety [anxietas] wastes us, and our mind [mens] is turned into
we have seen, had been by Gregory's day turned into the emotions them- tribulation [aerumna ]?' Any pleasure we might take in the perverted act
selves) that buffet ordinary people. Job is in the mode of Christ, whose (pravae delectation isgaudium) is short lived, since the negative emotions that
come in its train make it a source of bitterness (amaritudine) and sharp tears
(asperis fletibus) .18
9. Ibid., 4.27.49, CCSL 143, p. 193. The last part is not far from Isen and Andrade's notion "'
of affect's automaticity. See introduction, note 71.
ro. Ibid., !.36.53, CCSL 143, pp. 53-54: "atque omne opus quod mens bona intentione in-
cohat, haec velamine maeroris obumbrat.... Saepe se bono operi laetitia immoderata subi- 15. Ibid., 3.16.30, CCSL 143, pp. 134-35: "mentem tamen mediatoris Dei et hominum tenta-
ungit cumque plus mentem quam decet, hilarescere exigit, ab actione bona onme pondus tione quassare non valuit" (even so, [the Devil] could not shake the mind of the mediator be-
gravitatis repellit?' tween God and man by temptation).
n. Ibid., 2.47.74, CCSL 143, p. ro3: "Saepe enim mundas mentis nostrae cogitationes ar- 16. Ibid., 4.1.3, CCSL 143, p. 165.
dore libidinis accendunt?' 17. Ibid., 3.8,13, CCSL 143, p. 122. See also ibid., 3.20.38, p. 139, where sinners draw others
12. See ibid., 2.49.76, CCSL 143, pp. ros-6, where each virtue is paired with its own vice. in "as if loving" (quasi diligentes).
Here the vice that goes with justice (justitia) is self-love (amor suus), but compare ibid., 18. Ibid., 4.17.32-18.33, CCSL 143, pp. 184-85: "ita confusio perturbatis cogitationibus ob-
3.33.65, p. 155, where it is immoderate anger (immoderata ira) that hides behind and pretends nubilat mentem .... Cum enim ad mentem male gesta paenitendo reducimus, gravi mox
to be justice. maerore confundimur; perstrepit in animo turba cogitationum, maeror conterit, anxietas
13. For the decisive triumph of the virtues, see Prudentius, Psychomachia 11. 629-30, trans. devastat, in aerurnna mens vertitur et quasi quodam nubilo caliginis obscurat;ur ... Diem
H. J. Thomson, Loeb Classical Library (London, 1949), p. 322. amaritudine involvimus cum pravae delectationis gaudium, quae supplicia sequantur as-
14. Gregory I,Moralia prae 4.9, CCSL 143, p. 15. picimus, et asperis hoc fletibus circumdamus?'

82 } Emotional Commun{ties in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 83


In this way for Gregory, as for Augustine, emotions were potentially
VIRTUOUS EMOTIONS good, but only if they were properly directed. For Augustine that direction
The last point, however, casts a different light on emotions. They cannot be was upward, toward God. For Gregory, without discounting this point, the
entirely bad, since the tears that we shed out of the misery of penance "expi- direction was most importantly downward, from the holy man (who had al-
ate whatever sin the mind [animus] has committed by negligence?'l9 The ready achieved inner peace) to weaker bretlwen. When Job's friends showed
deadly sin of tristitia can be a virtue as well as a vice: a person "cleanses the their love (caritas) for him by weeping, tearing their garments, and sprin-
wantonness [lasciviam] of his [or her] pleasure [voluptatis suae] by lamenta- kling dust on their heads, Gregory approved. He explained that consolation
tions of sorrow [tristitiae lamentis]?'20 consists in becoming emotionally like the one you are comforting: "for the
"Fear" can be good as well, for it is the proper response to the tumult of process [ordo] of consolation is that when we want to stop an afflicted per-
unwanted thoughts. Commenting on Job 20:2, "Therefore various son from grieving [maerore], we first try to empathize [concordare] with his
thoughts succeed one another in me, and my mind is hurried away to differ- sorrow [luctui] by grieving [maerendo] ?' 26 The comforter must conform his
ent things:' Gregory explains: "[It is as ifJob] were saying in plain words: mind to the sufferer's or be alienated from him (separatur). It is a matter of
'Because I am contemplating the terror of the last judgment, therefore I am "softening" your mind, rendering it "congruent" (congruens) to that of an-
confounded in fear [in timore] by the tumults of my thoughts?" The mind, other. By congruency, the comforter "inheres" (inhaeret), and by inhering,
according to Gregory, is "hurried away" because it is thinking "in agitated he draws (trahat) the sufferer to him. Gregory likened the process to joining
fear" (sollicito pavore) of all it should have done but did not, all it did do but a piece of iron to iron- both parts must first be heated up and softened.
should not have done. 21 The penitent soul is rightly "terrified by fear" (pa- "We do not raise up the fallen unless we bend from our inflexible standing
vore terretur), trembling between hope (spem) and dread iformidinem). Even posture?' 27
if the sin has been remitted by God, the "affiicted mind" (mens afflicta) con- This is the "condescension of emotion" (condescensio passionis), the lower-
tinues to be fearful (trepidat). 22 This is all to the good. Yet by itself, unsup- ing of the self emotionally to participate in the emotional life of another. 28
ported by virtue, fear is a liability, paralyzing the mind into inaction. 23 Gre- Only very special people can do it properly. Though Job's friends had the
gory even calls fear (timor) a "temptation" (temptatio) sent by "the right idea, they went too far; their grief on his behalf knew no limits. Con-
multitude of impure spirits"; it "insinuates itself in our heart and disturbs solation must soothe rather than "sink the mind of the affiicted into the
the powers of our fortituqe?' 24 Thus there are "carnal members of the heaviness of despair?' 29 Only holy men (sancti viri) know how to do this.
church" whose fear (metus) and audacity (audacia) cause them to persuade They banish all the annoying thoughts (cogitationum insolentias) that assail
others to wickedness. 25 everyone else; they "sigh out of love for inward quiet [in amorem intimae
quietis]"; and yet they "do not leave off giving counsel to others out of love
19. Ibid., 4.18.34, CCSL 143, p. 185: "ut videlicet circumdantes fletus expient quicquid [caritatem ]?'30
delectatus per neglegentiam animus delinquit?'
20. Ibid., 4.18.33, CCSL 143, p. 185: "voluptatis suae lasciviam tristitiae lamentis tergat?'
21. Ibid., 15-1.1, CCSL 143A, p. 749: '~c si apertis vocibus dicat: Quia extremi iudicii ter- 26. Ibid., 3.12.20, CCSL 143, p. 127: "Ordo quippe consolationis est ut cum volumus aftlic-
rorem considero, idcirco cogitatiomun tumultibus in timore confundor. Tanto se quippe an- tum quempiam a maerore suspendere, studeamus prius maerendo eius luctui concordare?'
imus amplius in cogitatione dilaniat, quanta illud esse terribile quod imminet, pensat. Et in 27. Ibid., p2.2o, CCSL 143, p. 127: "nee iacentes erigimus, nisi a rigore nostri status in-
diversa mens rapitur, quando modo mala quae egit, modo bona quae agere neglexit?' clinemur?'
22. Ibid., 4.36.71, CCSL 143, p. 215. 28. Ibid., praef. 3.7, CCSL 143, p. 13; see also ibid., 19.25.45, CCSL 143A, p. 991: "caritatis
23. Ibid., 1.32.45, CCSL 143, p. 49. condescensio" (the condescension oflove).
24. Ibid., 2.49.76, CCSL 143, p. ros: "Nonnumquam se timor cordi insinuat et vires nos- 29. Ibid., 3.12.21, CCSL 143, p. 127: "aftlicti animum ad pondus desperationis premat?'
trae fortitudinis turbat?' 30. Ibid., 430.58-59, CCSL I43, pp. 203-4. See Carole Straw, Gregory the Great: Perfection
25. Ibid., 3.20.38, CCSL 143, p. 139. in Imperfection (Berkeley, 1988), chap. 4.

84 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { Bs


human beings had but a brief"time out'' on earth. 39 The pastor-someone
EMOTIONS OF AUTHORITY like Gregory! -"preached the right ways:' his words shining like silver. 40 But
Who were these holy men? They were the rulers of the holy church (sanctae they did not always fall on willing ears. People had to be made receptive.
Ecclesiae rectores). 31 Gregory was one of them. Like Saint Paul inhabiting the One solution was to use force: this was the role of the secular ruler, the "rhi-
"third heaven:' Gregory nevertheless cast his eyes down to earth "out of noceros" who "broke up the clods of the valley:' softening the hearts of the
compassion" (per compassionem). 32 As Conrad Leyser has observed, "Gre- wicked by compulsion. 41 The other was to use what modern psychologists
gory was prepared to take the risk of claiming to be morally qualified to would call "emotion management?' This was the job of the rectors of the
lead, to shoulder all the burdens of the faithful?' 33 One of his moral qualifi- church, Gregory included.
cations consisted in longing for the "inward quiet" yet agreeing to enter Consider Gregory's admiring account of a "man of God" who came
into the emotional lives of others. 34 The introduction to Gregory's Dia- down "from the mountain"-much like Paul from his third heaven. 42 Each
logues should be understood in this light. He was "pressed down [depressus] year this vir Dei visited Quadragesimus, the subdeacon of a church and Gre-
by the tumults of the worldly ... and sought a secret place, the friend of gory's informant. On one such visit the man of God noticed a poor little
sorrow [amicum moerori]?'35 Not much before this time, Cassiodorus (d. woman (paupercula) sitting in evident distress next to the body of her re-
583) had written about "the holy congregation of the just, which is heir of cently deceased husband. All tl1e proper rites had been performed for the
the Lord, pressed down [depressa] by worldly evils?' 36 It was consonant with dead man-the washing, clothing, wrapping in linen-but it was by now
Gregory's view of himself. From his secret vantage point, he could survey too late for the burial. Here is how Gregory described the scene:
"everything that is wont to inflict sorrow [dolorem ]?'37 When his friend Peter The widow thus sat next to the body of the dead man, spending the
found him in this "secret place:' Gregory immediately began to tell the sto- whole night weeping a great deal [in magnis fletibus]. She satisfied her
ries that made up the Dialogues. 38 sorrow by continual cries of lamentation. And when this had continued
The emotions of others were burdens, to be sure, but they were also the for a rather long time [diutius ], and the woman did not cease weeping in
major hooks on which to anchor any salvific message. Compassion-emo- any way, the man of God ... was much moved [conpunctus] and said to
tion shared-was the way in which the churchman "inhered" in his flock Quadragesimus, "My soul suffers [conpatitur] along with the sorrow of
and "drew'' it out. Had not Paul said, "Who is weak and I am not weak?
this woman. Rise, I beg you, and let us pray?'43
Who is tempted to evil and I am not burned?" (2 Cor. n:29).
Gregory had a keen apocalyptic sense. The last judgment was imminent; The two went into a nearby church and prayed for a long time (diutius).
Then the man collected some dust from the base of the altar, returned to the
corpse with Quadragesimus, and gave himself over to more prayer. But this
3I. Gregory I, Moralia 4.3r.61, CCSL 143, p. 205.
time, after he had prayed (again diutius), he rose and pulled off the linen
32. Gregory I, Dialogues p2.n, SC 260, p. 342. See 2 Cor. 12:2-3. On compassio and compa-
tior, terms created by Christian writers, see Konstan, Pity Transformed, chap. 4.
39. On Gregory's apocalypticism, see Markus, Gregory, chap. 4; for Gregory's notion of the
33. Leyser,Authority and Asceticism, p. 162.
34. On such identification with others, see ibid., pp. 172-77; Markus, Gregory, pp. 26-31; brief "space of life:' see Barbara H. Rosenwein, "Emotional Space:' in Codiernngen von Emo-

and Straw, Gregory: Peifection, pp. 201-2. tionen imMittelalter, ed. C. Stephen Jaeger and Ingrid Kasten (Berlin, 2003), pp. 289-93.
35 Gregory I, Dialogues I. I, se 260, P IO: "Quadam die, nimiis quorumdam saecularium 40. Gregory I, Moralia 4.3r.62, CCSL 143, p. 206: "rectores ... qui et sapie11ter vivendo

mmultibus depressus ... secretum locum petii amicum moerori?' aurum possideant et aliis recta praedicando, argento sacrae locutionis enitescant?'
36. Cassiodorus, Expositio in psalterium 6o, PL7o, col. 425: "Congregatio sancta justorum, 4I. Ibid., 3!.5-7, CCSL 143B, P 1554
quae est haereditas Domini, depressa malis saeculi?' 42. Gregory I, Dialogues 3-17.2-5, SC 260, pp. 336-40.
37 Gregory I, Dialogues I.l,se260, p. IO: "cuncta quae infligere dolorem consueverant?' 43. Ibid., 3-17.2-3, SC 260, p. 338: "Juxta defuncti igitur corpus viduata mulier sedit, quae in
38. Boesch Gajano, Gregorio Magno, pp. 262-64, argues that one of the purposes of the Di- magnis fletibus noctem ducens, continuis lamentorum vocibus satisfaciebat dolori. Cumque
alogues was to furnish Roman clerics with a large number of saints, doctrines, and miracles hoc diutius fieret et flere mulier nullo modo cessaret, vir Dei ... Quadragesimo subdiacono

that they might use flexibly in their pastoral work. conpunctus ait: 'Dolori huius mulieris anima mea conpatitur. Rogo, surge et oremus?"

86 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power -{ 87


cover from the face of the corpse. "When the woman saw this being done;' husband to God; he would not have been able to demonstrate the power of
Gregory continued, "she began to protest vigorously, astonished [mirari] at Christ. Emotions were powerful tools in the pastor's arsenal.
what he wanted to do?'44 Without replying, the man rubbed the corpse's Gregory used them himself, justifYing his religious authority through the
face with the dust. ''And the dead man, as he was being rubbed for a very manipulation of feeling. Let us consider a particular case in which, like the
long time [still another diutius ];' Gregory said, "received his soul" and re- anonymous vir Dei) Gregory discovered someone in distress, knew just
turned to life. Now it was the wife's turn. Gregory continued: "When the what to do about it, and imposed his solution on others-to their initial
woman, worn out by lamenting, saw this, she began to weep even more horror-in order to get it accomplished.
from joy [ex gaudio] and to shout out. Then the man of God restrained her The person in distress in this instance was Justus, a monk at Gregory's
with a mild injunction, 'Hush, hush; but if anyone asks you how this was monastery, who on his deathbed admitted to having secretly held on to
done, say simply that the Lord Jesus Christ did these things? "45 three gold coins.47 When Gregory learned of this he was extremely dis-
The story unfolds as if in slow motion, with very long periods of intense turbed: "I could not bear it calmly [aequanimiter];' for it broke the monas-
activity-weeping, praying, rubbing. Emotions power the action. They take tery's rule against private property. Thus, "struck with overwhelming grief
the narrative from the death of the husband to his resurrection. They are [nimio moerore], I began to think about what I should do both to purge the
natural feelings born, in Gregory's view, out of the situation itself and the dying man and to provide an example for the monks still living?'48 Here
proper human responses to it. The widow is in pain and anguish; the man grief took tl1e place of tl1e vir Dei's feeling of compunction. Gregory's horri-
of God is struck, in turn, with compunction arising from compassion;46 his fYing solution- his counterpart, as it were, to uncovering and rubbing dust
seeming act of defilement horrifies the widow; then the miracle turns her over the dead man-was to have tl1e monastery's prior order all the monks
sorrow into joy We see here a broad spectrum of feelings-sorrow, com- not to associate with the dying man or, indeed, utter one word to console
punction, compassion, wonder, and joy-and the fluid transformation of him. Only when Justus was at death's door was he to learn-from someone
one emotion into another. outside the monastery-that he was abominated (abominatus sit) by all the
What gave the vir Dei the right to intervene in the poor woman's life? monks because of his three coins. Moreover his body was to be thrown into
Consider for a moment the fact that he intruded by befouling a beloved a pit dug out of human excrement, the coins hurled atop the corpse. His fel-
dead husband, washed and ready for burial. It was the ancient equivalent of low monks were to chant the clamor, "Let your money be with you in
"shock treatment"; today it would be considered a perfect example of psy- Hell?'49
chiatric abuse of power. But it "worked?' And it did so not just because the All this happened. The dying monk bewailed his guilt and died in sorrow
meddler was godly but because, as such, he was willing to come down from (tristitia), which, as Gregory points out, was a very good thing for his soul.
the mountain, lower himself to the dust, and share in the paupercula's sor- Thirty days passed, and then the counterpart to the resurrection of the pau-
row, even if she did not understand that to be the case at first. Without his percula's husband began, initiated by an emotion, Gregory's compassion
compassion, the man of God would have had neither the will nor the right (conpati). He began, as he says "to thinlc of [Justus's] punishments with
to act. He would not have been able to turn the woman's thoughts from her heavy sorrow [doloregravi]" and to seek a remedy. Sadly (tristis) calling the

44. Ibid., 3.17.4, SC 260, p. 338: "Quod cum mulier fieri cerneret, contradicere vehementer
coepit et mirari quid vellet facere?' 47 The story is found in ibid., 4.57.9-15, SC 265, pp. 188-92.
45. Ibid., 3-17.5, SC 260, p. 340: "Quod dum mulier lamentis fatigata conspiceret, coepit ex 48. Ibid., 4.57.!0, SC 265, p. 188: "aequanimiter ferre non valui ... Tunc nimio moerore
gaudio magis flere et voces amplius edere. Quam vir Domini modesta prohibitione conpes- percussus cogitare coepi, vel quid ad purgationem morientis facerem, vel quid in exemplum
cuit, dicens: 'Tace, tace, sed si quis vos requisierit qualiter factum sit, hoc solummodo dicite, viventibus fratribus providerem?'
quia Dominus Jesus Christus opera sua fecit?" 49. Ibid., 4.57.n, SC 265, pp. 190: "simul omnes clamantes: 'Pecunia tua tecum sit in perdi-
46. For the relationship of compunction to tears, see ibid., 333-10-34.6, SC 260, pp. 398- tione?" For liturgical clamors and curses, see Lester K. Little, Benedictine Maledictions: Litur-
404. gical Cursing inRnmanesque France (ld1aca, N.Y., 1993).

88 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 89


prior before him, he said, "The brother who died has long been tormented up the monastic life, changed his mind, and abandoned it. ''You recall the
by fire. We ought therefore to do something out of love [aliquid caritatisJ habit that you have worn;' Gregory wrote, more out of hope than convic-
for him and help as much as we can so that he may be freed?'SO Gregory or- tion. 53 "I confess;' Gregory continued, "I speak in sorrow [maerens]; over-
dered daily masses on behalf of Justus for thirty days, at the end of which come by the unhappiness [tristitia] of your deed, I can hardly bring forth
period the dead man appeared in a vision saying, "I'm fine now" (jam modo any words?'54 Then Gregory proceeded to pledge his love and claim its
bene sum).
precedence over all others. He predicted .that everyone wo.uld co~e to
Here, as in the instance of the vir Dei; the pastor condescended to feel. Venantius with a different message, pretendmg to care about h1m. But they
But we can see from these two examples that his feelings were not exactly love not you but your property [non te) sed res tuas diligunt ]:' Gregory, by
"congruent" with those of the sufferer. Rather they anticipated the emo- contrast, loved Venantius himsel "May Almighty God show to your heart
tions that the sufferer should have, "drawing out" new emotions from old. with how much love [amore ], how much charity [caritate] my heart em-
We are not told why Justus confessed to having three coins, but Gregory's braces you?'55 And he continued in this vein, with words of love, for several
response, born of his unhappiness at the news, had a major impact on Jus- more lines. In this case, however, descending from tl1e mountain had no ef-
tus's state of mind. The dying man asked anxiously (anxie) to commend to " ex-mon1c1 "Vienann'us .56
feet. Five years later we fm d Gregory wntlng
himself to the brethren, and when told he was an abomination to all, he
groaned bitterly (vehementer ingemuit) over his guilt and died "in sadness it- FEELINGS VALORIZED AND DEVALUED
self" (in ipsa tristitia). Moreover, Gregory transformed the very emotional Gregory did not ordinarily talk about emotions. The "inward quiet'' was the
life of the monastery. When the monks learned that they had been forbidden ideal. The most emotional passages in Gregory's writings ironically had to
to associate with J ustus, not to give him even one word of consolation, they do with his unhappiness at being assailed by emotions, the "fruitless tu-
were perturbati) stirred up with all sorts of feelings. They began guiltily to mults of his thoughts" (vanis cogitationum tumultibus)P To tl1e Byzantine
bring out their little bits of private property so that they'd not meet Justus's princess Theoctista he wrote, "I have lost the profound joys. [gaudia] of my
fate.
quiet ... and therefore I bitterly bewail [deploro] my expulswn far ~rom the
Gregory was not the abbot of his monastery. 51 Nevertheless he had the face of my Creator?'58 There was a time, he continued, when he deSired (ap-
"right" to order the punishment for Justus. Whatever the actual power n~la petens) nothing, feared (pertimescens) nothing, and seemed "to stand on the
tions within tl1e monastery may have been, Gregory justified his authority summit of things?'59 But then, attacked by temptation, he fell "into fears
not by position but by sentiment. Both his punishment for Justus and his and terrors [ad timores pavoresque], for even ifl feel no fear [nil timeo] for
work to reprieve him were motivated by sorrow.
myself, I dread rformido] much for those who have been committed to
In another case of "emotional condescension:' when Gregory was al-
ready pope, he wrote to Venantius, patricius Italiae. 52 Venantius had taken
Roman Empire) vol. 3, A.D. 527-64I) ed. John Robert Martindale (Cambridge, 1992), PP 1367-
68.
so. Gregory I, Dialogues 4.57.14, SC 265, p. 192: "coepit animus meus defimcto fratri con-
53. Gregory I, Registrum r.33, CCSL 140, p. 40: "In quo enim habim fueris recolis.'' .
pari eiusque cum dolore gravi supplicia pensare, et si quod esset ereptionis eius remedium
54. Ibid., p. 41: "Ecce, fateor, maerens loquor et facti tui tristitia addictus edere verba v1x
quaerere. Tunc evocato ad me eodem Pretioso monasterii nostri praeposito tristis dixi: 'Diu
valeo.''
est quod frater ille, qui defunctus est, igne cruciatur. Debemus ei aliquid caritatis inpendere,
55 . Ibid.: "Omnipotens Deus cordi tuo indicet cor meum quanto amore, quanta te caritate
et eum in quantum possumus ut eripiatur adiuvare.'" '
complectitur.''
sr.Jeffrey Richards decisively rebuts the view that Gregory was abbot at St. Andrew's;
56. Ibid., 6.42, CCSL 140, pp. 414-15.
Richards, Consul ofGod: The Lift and Times ofGregory the Great (London, 1980 ), pp. 2_ .
3 33 57 Ibid., r.s, CCSL 140, p. 6.
52. Gregoty I, Registrum !.33, CCSL 140, pp. 39-4r. In identifYing this Venantius as the
5s. Ibid., p. s: ''Alta enim quietis meae gaudia perdidi ... Unde me a conditoris mei facie
husband ofltalica and father ofAntonina and Barbara, as opposed to another Venantius who
longe expulsum deploro.''
also appears in the corpus of Gregory's letters, I am following The Prosopography of the Later
59 Ibid.: ''Videbar mihi in quodam rerum vertice stare.''

90 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 91


me."60The whl .
o e passage, wntten on G regory's accessiOn
to the papacy in
He meant simply to drive home the point that Felicity was no ordinary
590, suggests that the monastery had been his "quiet place:' while his new
office brought nothing but tumult. mother. Ordinary mothers, as he went on to say, would fear that their sons
might die; Felicity feared that hers would survive her and be lost to God. In
Yet the world was not so utterly painful nor the monastery so totally joy-
Gregory's view, Felicity's love for her sons, which reversed the expected
ful as Gregory claimed. In the world was the compensation of affection
order of feelings, was heroic. Because of it, she was "more than a martyf?'67
something that Gregory both despised and prized. In the monastery wer~
She had overcome "her sex along with the world.'' 68 In the emotional com-
moments of bitter sorrow and confusion (we have already seen one in the
munity that Gregory knew and invoked here, mothers loved their sons and
case ofJustus ), which Gregory viewed with considerable ambivalence. 61 Let
wanted them to live. Even as he expressed admiration for Felicity, he could
us take up each of these venues in turn.
not repress his astonishment at her unnaturalness. Indeed, he had to reas-
sure his audience by saying, "Let none among you, dearest brethren, think
Affection in the world that her carnal heart beat with little emotion [a.!Jectus] as her sons died. Nor
Gregory was tenderhearted. When he wrote to "ex-monk Venantius" he could she see her sons dying, whom she knew to be her flesh, without pain
nevertheless addressed him as "dearest son" (carissime fili). 62 When he heard [sine dolore]. But it was the interior strength of her love [vis amoris interior]
that Venantius was ill, he wrote to John, bishop of Syracuse, about his "very that conquered the pain [dolorem] of the flesh.''69
sweet son lord Venantius."63 He kept the whole family in mind. To Venan- Gregory turned even the Gospel reading of the homily into a disquisi-
tius's daughters, Barbara and Antonina, he wrote letters of consolation and tion on mothers and sons. He chose Matthew 12:4-6-so, where Jesus speaks
reassurance. 64 He was in fact exquisitely sensitive to family feeling. to the crowd while his mother and brother stand outside iforis) trying to get
. In one of his Homilies on the Gospels, given at the basilica of Saint Felicity his attention. Jesus snubs them: "Who is my mother and who are my broth-
m Rome on the saint's natal day, Gregory told the story of Felicity and her ers?" he asks, and then, stretching his hand toward his disciples, he says,
seven sons. They were all brought before Roman magistrates, made profes- "Here is my mother; here are my brothers.'' Gregory pretended puzzle-
sions of their Christian faith, refused to sacrifice to the emperor, and were ment: dearly a man should know his own mother. Then Gregory explained:
condemned to death. Gregory commented, "We read in the more correct Jesus's meaning is hidden. The disjunction between what we expect and
a~counts of her deeds that [Felicity] feared [timuit] leaving her seven sons what Jesus actually does suggests that we must read the passage allegori-
alrve after her in the flesh." 65 A review of the extant versions of the story sug- cally: Mary signifies the synagogue, condemned to stand outside iforis). A
gests that there are no such accounts. 66 But Gregory was not a text editor. true mother is a preacher and tl1at sort of mother is normally male. Thus
Jesus's disciples become his mother. Then, turning to the main topic of his
homily, Gregory linked Felicity to Jesus's disciples. Felicity, too, was a
.6~. Ibid.,. P~ 5-6: "ad timores pavoresque corrui, quia, etsi mihi nil timeo, eis tamen qui preacher, precisely because of her fear for her sons. For, because she feared,
rmh1 commissi sunt mulrum formido?'
6r. On Gregory's ambivalence, see Straw, Gregory: Peifection, esp. pp. 22-24.
62. Gregory I, Rcgistrum 6.42, CCSL 140, p. 415.
67. Gregory I, Homiliae in Evangelia 3.3, p. 22: "Non ergo hanc feminam martyram, sed
63. Ib~d., n.25, CCSL 14oA, p. 895: "de dulcissimi filii mei donmi Venantii aegrirudine?'
plus quam martyram dixerim?'
64. Ibid., 1!.23, CCSL 140A, pp. 893-94; ibid., 1!.59, pp. 965-66.
68. Ibid., 3.4, p. 24: "quae cum saeculo sexum vicit?' See 2 Mace. 7:21: "femlneae cogita-
65. Gregory I, Homiliae in Evangelia 3.3, ed. Raymond Etaix, CCSL 141 (Turnhout, ),
1999 tioni masculinum animum inserens, dixit ad eos .. ?' (joining a man's heart to a woman's
P 21: "Septem quippe filios sicut in gestis eius emendatioribus legirur, sic post se timuit vivos
in carne relinquere?' thought, she said to [her sons] ... ).
69. Gregory I, Homiliae in Evangelia 3.3, p. 22: "Nemo ergo ex vobis, fratres carissimi, ex-
66. See Barbara H. Rosenwein, "In gestis emendatioribus: Gregory the Great and the Gesta
istimet quod eius cor morientibus filiis etiam carnalis affecrus minime pulsavit. Neque enim
martyrum," in Retour aux sources. Textes, etudes et documents d'histoire mediivale offirts aMichel
filios, quos carnem suam esse noverat, sine dolore poterat morientes videre, sed erat vis
Parisse, ed. Sylvain Gouguenheim et al. (Paris, 2004), pp. 843-48.
amoris interior, quae dolorem vinceret carnis?'

92 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


Passions and Power { 93
she "strengthened the hearts of her sons in their love for the heavenly fa- At this point Gregory was moved. "But putting aside this sad subject [hoc
therland through preaching fpraedicando ].''70 triste ], let us return to those happy things [laeta] that I started to talk
At this point in the homily, Gregory turned to the men of his audience, about.'' 77
metaphorically ousting the women. "Brothers:' he said, "consider this
woman" (he meant Felicity), "we who are men in our bodily members.''71 Misery and Pain in the Monastery
We men have plenty of problems: "if we hear one slight word of ridicule The "happy things" that Gregory had just previously been talking about
from the mouth of another, we instantly retreat:' weak ifracti) and con- were the reunion of little Musa with the Virgin Mary. Warned in a dream to
founded (confusi).72 We're supposed to love God, but instead we love cease doing light and childish things and to abstain from "laughter and
worldly honor. Gregory accused men, himself included, not only of weak- jokes" (risu et iocis) if she wished to serve Maty, Musa followed the admoni-
ness but more precisely of mourning lost children inconsolably (sine consola- tion, fell ill, and soon "exited her virginal body to live with holy virgins.'' 78
tione lugemus).n In Gregory's emotional world, joy was tied to misery. When he spoke, as in
Thus men were soft on children. In theMoralia Gregory pointed out the his letter to Theoctista, about the profound joys (gaudia) of his monastic re-
difference between caring for the poor as an obligation and caring for them treat, they were wrung, as it were, out of unl1appiness itsel
"like a father.'' In the latter case, one acted "out oflove" (per amorem).74 In This point is clearest in the monastic context. The "fruitless tumults of
his Dialogues Gregory recalled a father who loved his five-year-old son too thoughts" that assailed men outside its walls crept in as well through its very
much in the flesh (nimis carnaliter diligens).75 He was so easy on the boy that confmes. Consider Eleutherius, originally abbot of San Marco at Spoleto
he let him blaspheme. When the plague hit, and the child was near death, but later a monk at Gregory's monastery on the Caelian Hill. He told Gre-
his father held him close. But, Gregory said, gory about a miracle. He had brought a boy to his monastery who, in his
original home-a monastery of women-had been tormented by an evil
the boy, with trembling eyes saw evil spirits coming after him and began
spirit. Under Eleutherius's tutelage, the child was cured. But, as Gregory
to cry out, "Hold them back, father; hold them back, father.'' And while
put it, "the old man's soul was touched overmuch by happiness [inmoder-
shouting, he bent his face to hide himself from them in his father's
atius per laetitiam Jregarding the health of the boy.''79 Eleutherius boasted to
bosom. When his father asked the trembling child what he saw, the boy
the brethren that the Devil might have been able to do his dirty work
explained, "There are black men here who want to take me away.'' And
among a few nuns but dared not do so among true "servants of God.'' As
when he had said this, he immediately blasphemed tl1e name of the [Di-
vine] Majesty and gave up his soul. 76 soon as these words were uttered, the boy fell under the Devil's spell. Gre-
gory recounted the scene:
70. Ibid., p. 2r: "filiorum corda in amorem supernae patriae praedicando roboravit?' When he saw what happened, the old man [Eleutherius] immediately
7I. Ibid., 3.4, p. 24: "Consideremus, fratres, hanc feminam, consideremus nos qui membris gave himself over to lamentation [in lamentum dedit]; and after he had
corporis viri sumus?' I do not follow Felice Lifshitz, "Gender and Exemplarity East of the
mourned [lugentem] for a long time and the brethren had wanted to con-
Middle Rhine: Jesus, Mary and the Saints in Manuscript Context;' Early Medieval Europe 9
sole him [consolari], he responded by saying, "Believe me, no bread is en-
(2ooo): 333, when she argues that age, not gender, was Gregory's focus in a similar passage
(Gregory I, Homiliae in Evangelia rr.3, P75): "Quid inter haec nos barbati et debi!es
dicimus?" (What do we say to these things, we who are bearded and weak?) se ab eis in sinu patris absconderet. Quem cum ille trementem requireret quid videret, puer
72. Gregory I, Homiliae inEvangelia II.3, p. 75: "si unus contra nos levissimus sermo ab ore adiunxit, dicens: 'Mauri homines venerunt, qui me tollere volunt? Qui cum hoc dixisset,
irridentis eruperit, ab intentione actionis nostrae fracti protinus et confusi resilimus?' maiestatis nomen protinus blasphemavit et animam reddidit?'
73- Ibid. 77. Ibid., 4.r9.5, SC 265, p. 74: "Sed interim hoc triste seponentes, ad ea quae narrare co-
I
74. Gregory I, Moralia I9.24.4r, CCSL I43A, p. 989. eperam laeta redeanms?' ''
75. Gregory I, Dialogues 4.19.2, SC 265, p. 72. 78. Ibid., 4.r8.r-3, se 265, pp. 70-72.
76. Ibid., 4.I9.3-4, se 265, pp. 72-74: "malignos ad se venisse spiritus trementibus oculis 79. Ibid., 3.33.4, SC 26o, p. 394: "senis animus de salute pueri inmoderatius per laerltiam
puer aspiciens, coepit clamare: 'Obsta, pater. Obsta, pater? Qui clamans declinabat faciem, ut tactus est?'

94 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 95


tering anyone's mouth today unless that boy is snatched from the Augustinian moment: "Who am I, who was I?" Gregory asked himself. 85
demon;'' Then he prostrated himself in prayer with all the brothers and Without pain, he was bereft of his own identity.
they all prayed until the moment that the boy was healed from his tor-
ment.80 Gregory reveals to us the importance of Christian doctrine in shap~ng at
least one-his-emotional community. Looking forward to the hfe to
The tale is precisely about an unwanted thought-the tickle of happiness come, devaluing the present, seeing true happiness in pain, and pain in plea-
(laetitia)-that gave pleasure and commanded assent. Eleutherius felt im- sure, he continually reevaluated and second-guessed his emotions and those
mediate remorse. He lamented and mourned, as was right to do. His of others. While all those around him were mourning the impact of the
brethren felt compassion, but they took no action. It was only when they plague on little ones, Gregory was excoriating them-and himself-for
too fasted and prayed-entering into his agony-that the misfortune was their feelings reminding them that true Christians should be more con-
put right. Sacrifice and sorrow, not joy, was valorized in the monastery. But cerned abou; blasphemy than death, should care more about eternal life
that very reversal was itself understood as joyous. than life in the world.
That Gregory experienced the whole tenor of life in his monastery as The values and goals of ascetic Christianity, first articulated by the Desert
painful is made clear in a story Gregory told about himself. He suffered ex- Fathers, shaped both what Gregory thought of his emotions (and those of
cruciating stomach pains throughout his life, and his time in the monastery others) and the very feelings themselves. They played a role analogous to
was no exception. 81 When these attacks came on, he was too weak to fast. the modern "emotionology'' that interested Peter and Carol Steams: "tl1e
On one Holy Saturday, shamed by the fact that even the young boys were attitude or standards that a society, or a definable group within a society,
carrying out a fast while he could not, Gregory was bitterly unhappy: "I be- maintains toward basic emotions and their appropriate expression [and]
came enfeebled:' he says "more out of sorrow [moerore] than out of weak- ways that institutions reflect and encourage these attitudes in hu~an con-
ness [infirmitate ];''82 His very soul was sad (tristis). The solution that he duct;''86 The social constructionist theory maintains that all feelmgs are
alighted upon was to ask Eleutherius-the same man who had rejoiced too shaped by such attitudes, since assessments of well-being rely on internal-
much-to go into the oratory and "to obtain by his prayers to the omnipo- ized standards of good and bad, weal and woe, that are socially determined.
tent Lord that the strength to fast be given me on this day;''83 Eleutherius But when the ideal is "internal quiet:' then even the joys of heaven are po-
did so, with warmth and conviction-that is, with tears-and when he was tentially suspect. . .
finished, Gregory reported a startling turn of events: "my stomach received At the same time, however, Gregory gingerly welcomed emottons tf they
such strength that I forgot about both food and pain entirely;''84 It was an aided the machinery of salvation. No lover could have sworn truer affection
than Gregory did in his exhortations to the wavering .Venantius. ~o
mourner could have lamented more bitterly than Eleuthenus when trymg
so. Ibid., 3-33-5, SC 260, p. 396: "Quo viso senex se protinus in lamentum dedit. Quem
to rid the boy once again of the demon. Tristitia) one of the deadly sins, was
dum lugentem diu fratres consolari voluissent, respondit dicens: 'Credite mihi, quia in nul-
lius vestrum ore hodie panis ingreditur, nisi puer iste a daemonic fuerit ereptus.' Tunc se in
also a salvific force, helping the hapless Justus to repent and eventually
orationem cum cunctis fratribus stravit, et eo usque oratum est, quousque puer a vexatione achieve salvation. Felicity's fear was a lesson to all. Thus Gregory>s emo-
sanaretur.'' tional sensibilities helped shape the way in which he understood ~d wrote
SI. Gregory complained about these pains inMoralia, ad Leandrum 5, CCSL 143, p. 6. about the Christian religion.
S2. Gregory I, Dialogues 3.33.7, SC 26o, p. 39S: "coepi plus moerore quam infirmitate defi- Above all, Gregory privileged the feelings of a religious elite, mainly .but
cere." not entirely male. He imagined Felicity trembling for her sons' salvatwn,
S3. Ibid., 333.S, SC 26o, p. 39S: "eumque peterem, ,quatenus mihi, ut die illo ad jejunan-
dum virtus daretur, suis apud omnipotentem Dominum precibus obtineret.''
S4. Ibid.: "Sed ad vocem benedictionis illius virtutem tantam meus stomachus accepit, ut
ss. Ibid., 3.33.9, SC 260, p. 398: "Coepi mirari quis essem, quis fuerim.''
mihi funditus a memoria tolleretur cibus et aegritudo.'' 86. Steams and Steams, "Emotionology;' p. 813.

Passions and Power { 97


96 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
the vir Dei struck by compunction at the paupercula's dilemma, Eleutherius epitaphs emphasizing virtues, people at Trier were paying for inscriptions
in deep mourning. There were others who shared these ideals. Gregory cer- that reminded them of family affection. Let us now return to Gaul to ex-
tainly thought Theoctista a kindred spirit. Peter, Gregory's interlocutor in plore its emotional communities more closely. We begin with one that was
the Dialogues) was as well. He was depicted as hanging on Gregory's every contemporary with Gregory.
word and agreeing with all of Gregory's sentiments. Peter was a real per-
son- a member of Gregory's monastery and later an overseer of papal prop-
erty in Italy. Most of the monks at St. Andrew's had been Gregory's child-
hood friends; many accompanied him to Constantinople and stayed on
with him when he became pope. 87 In the Moralia they become his "an-
chored cable:' holding on to the sea-tossed Gregory "by brotherly affection"
(germana caritate). 88 They formed the core of the discussion group that im-
portuned Gregory to expound his views on the Book ofJob. These people
constituted the emotional community of which Gregory was a part. They
were keen on both virtue and authority, dual goals that helped shape both
their feelings and their attitudes toward their feelings.
To be in this emotional community was to be constantly struggling
against feelings that were no less keenly felt for being repudiated. As Augus-
tine had long before argued, the City of God (which lives by faith) and the
City of Man (which lives according to the world) were inextricably com-
mingled on earth. This had emotional implications. Even the citizens of the
City of God were mired in earthly feelings. Yet this was not all bad. As we
have seen, such feelings were the hooks to which holy men tied their salvific
ropes to haul up fallen men. Furthermore, as Gregory's discussion of Felic-
ity shows, feelings directed toward worldly things had merit as long as they
were, at the same time, counterbalanced. Felicity would have been a hard-
hearted monster had she not felt pain about her sons' deaths. Gregory could
not imagine any good mother contemplating the deaths of her sons without
sorrow. The constraints to virtue in Gregory's emotional community were
mitigated by such concessions. What was wonderful about Felicity was not
that she wanted her sons to die but that she felt as she did in spite of not
wanting them to die.
If we were to try to match Gregory's community with any of those we
have seen composing epitaphs in Gaul, it would come closest to that of the
bereaved at Vienne, for whom Christian goals were paramount. But we
know that at the same time as men and women at Vienne were sponsoring

87. See the quick review of the most important men in this group in Leyser, Authority and
Asceticism> p. 131 n. 4; on Gregory's social world, Markus, Gregory> pp. 8-r2.
88. Gregory I, Moralia> ad Leandrum 'I, CCSL, 143, p. 2.

98 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Passions and Power { 99


tunatus wrote poems to or on behalf of Gregory during the nearly quarter-
century of his poetic career; these paeans are sprinlded throughout the
eleven books of poems he wrote between about 565 and 592. 5 The "second
Orpheus" (as he called himself) depended on Gregory's patronage: in one
poem he spoke of a villa that Gregory had given him; in another he asked
him for some land; in a third he thanked Gregory for some shoe leather. 6 At
the same time, Gregory needed Fortunatus's eloquence to go to work for
him. He requested a panegyric from Fortunatus to laud Avitus of Clermont
In 573, around the time that Gregory the Great meant to retire for good to when the latter forcibly converted the Jews in his city; he had Fortunatus
his monastery on the Caelian Hill (but was tapped for a mission to Con- write inscriptions for St. Martin's refurbished cell at Tours; and he expressed
7
stantinople instead), another Gregory was installed as bishop ofTours. His the wish that Fortunatus, not he, had written the Miracles of St. Martin.
friend Venantius Fortunatus wrote a congratulatory poem to the citizens
there: ''Applaud, you happy [folices] people.... For here comes the hope geistigen Kulture des Merowingerreiches (Leipzig, 1915 ), p. ro2, Fortunatus is "a conscious liar;'
[spes] of the flock, the father fpater] of the people, the lover [amator] of the while .Gregmy is "naive" and "sincere?' In Samuel Dill, Roman Society in Gaul in the Merovin-
city. Let the sheep rejoice [laetificentur] over the gift of this pastor?'l The gianAge (1926; repr., London, 1966), p. 281, Fortunatus is "vain, needy, and self-indulgent;'
but Gregory is "the grave Bishop ofTours?' In Erich Auerbach, Mimesis: The Representation of
new bishop ofTours approved the effusiveness: he encouraged Fortunatus
Reality in Western Literature, trar1s. Willard Trask (1946; repr. Garden City, N.J., 1957), PP 75,
to publish his collected poems, this one included. Fortunatus complied,
78-79, Fortunatus is an artificial writer, while Gregory creates a new mimetic strategy of"vi-
dedicating the volume to Gregory. sual vividness" and "sensory participation?' Recent scholarship has tended to reverse tl1e
Venantius Fortunatus (ea. 535-ca. 6os), trained in rhetoric at Ravenna, judgments, but tl1is simply transposes tl1e two men's position on the see-saw. Gregory is no
came to Gaul from Italy to earn his living by writing flattering poems to longer naive and possibly not even sincere. For Waiter Goffart, The Narrators of Barbarian
aristocrats and royalty in return for their largesse. 2 Gregory of Tours (ea. History: ]ordanes, Gregory of Tours, Bede, and Paul the Deacon (A.D. sso-Boo) (Princeton, 1988),
538-ca. 594) spent his childhood at saints' shrines and learned his letters in p. 231, Gregory is a satirist: juxtaposing tl1e worst with the best, his writings produce the "re-
the households of bishops at Lyon and Clermont. 3 If the two are mentioned alism of caricature?' In the hands of !an Wood, "The Individuality of Gregory of Tours;' in
The World ofGregory ofTours, ed. Kathleen Mitchell and !an Wood (Leiden, 2002), pp. 29-46,
together, it is normally to contrast them. 4 Yet they were good friends. For-
Gregory is a crafty writer, deftly forwarding his highly personal agenda. The "grave bishop"
turns out to have been a skilled manipulator in depicting reality as he wished it to be. Mearl-
r. Fortunatus, Poems 5.3, ll. 1-6, ed. Reydellet, 2:16-17: "Plaudite, felices populi .... Spes
while Fortunatus, rising in stature, has become the "new-style" writer, inventing (according
gregis ecce venit, plebis pater, urbis amator: munere pastoris laetificentur oves?' I use Rey- to Godman, Poets and Emperors, chap. 1) a novel form of public declamatory verse: brief,
dellet's edition where possible, but it ends with book 8 of the poems, and for the poems of pithy, and perfectly suited to its audience. In George, Venantius Fortunatus, esp: pp. 16-17,
the later books and appendices, I use the edition of Leo (see note n below). Fortunatus is tl1e contrary of"vain and needy"; he is, instead, ever sensitive to others, giving
2. For biographical background, see Judith George, Venantius Fortunatus: A Latin Poet in ar1 unconfident elite the identity it craves. This is also the verdict of Reydellet in Fortunatus,
Merovingian Gaul (Oxford, 1992), pp. 18-34; and Reydellet's introductory remarks in Form- Poems, 1:lii-liii.
natus, Poems, 1:vii-xxviii. Regarding the date of death, Reydellet notes (p. xxvii) that Form- 5. The final collection consisted of 218 poems ar1d 12 works of prose. In addition, 31 poems
natus became bishop of Poitiers ea. 6oo and "died shortly thereafter?' Yvonne Labande- by Fortunatus not included in the collection have been discovered. See George, Venantius
Mailfert gives the date of death as "before 6ro"; Labande-Mailfert, "Les debuts de Fortunatus, app. 2; and Fortunatus, Poems, ed. Reydellet, 1:xxviii-xxxiii. Two early poems
Sainte-Croix;' in Histoire de l'abbaye Sainte-Croix de Poitiers. Quatorze siecles de vie monastique were written while Fortunatus was still in Italy, prior to his departure from there at the end
= Memoires de la Societe des Antiquaires de l'Ouest, 4th ser., 19 (1986-87): n2 n. 70. of the summer or in the fall of 565; the rest were written in FrarlCia. See Fortunatus, Poems,
3 For tl1e basic facts of Gregory's early life, see !an Wood, Gregory of Tours, Headstart His- ed. Reydellet, p. viii.
tmy Papers (Bangor, 1994); and Martin Heinzelmann, Gregory ofTours: History and Society in 6. Fortunatus, Poems 8.19-21, ed. Reydellet, 2:159-61.
the Sixth Century, trans. Christopher Carroll (Cambridge, 2001), pp. 29-35. 7 Fortunatus, Poems 5.5a ar1d r.5, ed. Reydellet, 2:19-20, 1:24-25. Gregory expresses the
4 In Richard Koebner, Venantius Fortunatus. Seine Persiinlichkeit und seine Stellung in der wish that Fortunatus, not he, had written the miracles in Gregory ofTours, Libri I-IV de vir-

The Poet and the Bishop { ro1


The correspondence between the two men seems to have been easygoing natus and Gregory. Tours was Gregory's episcopal see, while Fortunatus
and even (in Judith George's words) "affectionate and gently teasing?'B The had settled at Poitiers by 568 at the latest. Both had to be extremely wary of
two shared a particular veneration for St. Martin, whose Vita Fortunatus Chilperic and his wife, Fredegund. In 580 Gregory was hauled before this
versified and dedicated to Gregory, and they both had a special and close re- king and his bishops at Berny-Riviere on charges of treason and slandering
lationship with the nuns of the convent of the Holy Cross at Poitiers. the queen. It was, in the words of Ian Wood, a moment of "real danger;'
They were also part of the same court community at Reims/Metz, the during which Gregory came "within a whisker of death?' 10 Fortunatus came
center of one of the Merovingian kingdoms. The Frankish King Clovis to tl1e trial and declaimed a panegyric before the assembled Icing and "fa-
(4-8I-5II), who famously converted early to Roman Catholicism, created the thers?' He praised Chilpefic for his power, heritage, fame, and goodness; he
Merovingian kingdom in Gaul and bequeathed it to his four surviving sons called the queen wise, clever, prudent, useful, generous, and intelligent. He
(tl1ree by one mother, Clotild; one by a different woman) (see table 7). asked the Icing to add to all this one thing: to "be the apex of the Catholic re-
Though at loggerheads at times, the brothers successfully plotted together ligion?'ll Gregory himself never mentioned Fortunatus's presence at the
to keep their nephews from inheriting a throne. In 558, with the death of hearing.l2 But it was surely a factor in his eventual acquittal.
Childebert I, Clothar I became sole Icing. When he died, in 561, his lcingdom
was divided among his four sons, whose "civil wars" were bewailed in the
COMMUNITIES
pages of Gregory of Tours's Histories. Nevertheless, the idea of a single
Perhaps Gregory did not in this case entirely appreciate Fortunatus's hyper-
Merovingian lcingdom ruled by blood brothers was not lost.
bole. Both men were masters of flattery, but Fortunatus's was more flam-
Sigibert's kingdom centered on Reims and Metz. Charibert's kingdom
boyant.l3 After all, he lived on its effects. Fortunatus made his first public
was associated with Paris, Guntram's with Orleans, and Chilperic's with
appearance in Gaul in 566, when Sigibert married the Visig?tl1ic p~incess
Soissons. Later these kingdoms would be conceptualized more territorially,
Brunhild at Metz.l4 At the wedding he declaimed in lofty Latln an eplthala-
witl1 Sigibert's called Austrasia, Charibert's Neustria, and Guntram's Bur-
mium that he had composed for the occasion. Soon Fortunatus was writing
gundy. But in 561 the lcingdoms were still envisioned as clusters of cities and
poems with classical pretensions and words of praise to and about. ~arious
their outlying regions. Trier was part of Sigibert's kingdom- it was (and is)
Austrasian bishops: Carentinus of Cologne, Ageric of Verdun, V1hcus of
about fifty miles from Metz- but so too was the distant city of Clermont.
Metz, Nicetius of Trier, Egidius of Reims.1 5 Gregory of Tours was a great
Fortunatus began his career at Metz, celebrating the wedding of Sigibert
admirer of Bishop Nicetius of Trier; word of Fortunatus's talent spread
and Brunhild there. Gregory was appointed bishop at Tours by the same
through clerical networks such as these. 16
king and queen's fiat: Fortunatus said that Gregory obtained the post at
Tours by their judicio-their judgment or approbation. Moreover it was
their bishop, Egidius of Reims, who consecrated Gregory.9
ro. Wood, Gregory ofTours, pp. rs, 17.
When Charibert died without heirs in 567, Tours and Poitiers went to Si- n. Venantius Fortunahls, Poems 9.r, 1. 144, in Venanti Honori Clementiani Fortunati ..
gibert, but this devolution was disputed by Chilperic, and fighting between Opera Poetica, ed. Fridericus Leo, MGH AA 4/I, p. 205: "sis quoque catholicis religionis
the two kings commenced, ending only in 575 with Sigibert's deatl1, prob- apex?' . .
ably by assassins sent by Fredegund, Chilperic's wife. Then, in 584-, when 12 . Gregory discusses the charges and the court proceedings in Gregory of Tours, Htston-
Chilperic died, Guntram in turn claimed Tours and Poitiers. These conflicts arnm tibriX 5.49, ed. Bruno Krusch and Wilhelm Levison, MGH SRM r/r, pp. 258-63 (here-
over Tours and Poitiers created another area of common ground for Fortu- after Greg. Tur., Histories). : .
13 . For Gregory's flattery, see Greg. Tur., Histories 9.2r, p. 441, where King Guntram IS
likened to a good bishop.
tutibus beati Martini episcopi, prae, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM r/2, p. 136 (hereafter 14. George, Vena~tius Fortunatus, pp. 25-26.
Greg. Tur., VM).
15 . Fortunatus,Poems pr-12 (Nicetius), 3-13 (Vilicus), 3-14 (Carentinus), 3-!5 (Igidius), 3.23
8. George, Venantius Fortunatus, p. 128. and 23a (Ageric), ed. Reydellet, r:ro6-rs, 121-23.
9. Fortunatus, Poems 5.3, 11. 13-16, ed. Reydellet, 2:17. r6. Greg. Tur., VP 17.5, pp. 282-83.

ro2 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { I03
TABLE 7. The Merovingians
Clovis I (481-su) = Clotild

Theuderie I (sn-33) Chlodomer (sn-24) Childebert I (su-sS) Clothar I (sn-61)


= Radegund

?
Charibert I Guntram Sigibert I Chilperie I Gundovald
(S61-67) (S61-93) (S61-7S) (S61-84)
= Brunhild = Fredegund

I I
Bertha Childebert II Clothar II
= Ethelbert, king of Kent (d. 616) (575-96) N (s84-629)
B (613-29)
A (613-23)
Theudebert II Theuderie II 1

A (s96-612) B (s96-613) Dagobert I


A (612-13) A (623-32)
N&B (629-39)

Sigibert Ill Clovis II


A (632-ca. 6s6) N&B (639-s7)
I A (ea. 6s6-s7)
Dagobert II = Balthild
A (67s-79)
I
Clothar Ill Theuderie Ill Childerie II
N&B (6s7-73) N&B (673, 67s-ca. 690) A (662-7s)
A (687-ca. 690) N&B (673-7s)
I
Clovis Ill Childebert Ill DanieljChilperie II
(ea. 690-94) (694-7II) (ea. 71S-2I)
I
Dagobert Ill
(7u-ca. 71s)
I
Theuderie N
(721-37)
I?
Childerie Ill
(743-ca. 7S1)

Note: This is a simplified genealogy. Most Merovingian kings had more than one wife (Sigibert I was an
exception), and most had more children than those noted here. A, king of Austrasia; B, king of Burgundy; N,
king ofNeustria; "="stands for "married to."
It spread through lay routes as well. Right after Sigibert's marriage, For- gious life, became a mm .at her own foundation of the Holy Cross at
tunatus was already writing to his Austrasian "friends"- often designated by Poitiers; and Agnes, the abbess of Holy Cross.2s
the word dulcedo (literally "sweetness") and its variantsP He wrote four Although we might imagine that tl1e convent of tl1e Holy Cross brought
poems to Gogo, Sigibert's counselor and the escort ofBrunhild from Spain Fortunatus into a religious, social, and emotional community at variance
to Gaul, thanking him for dinner and praising him. 18 He wrote to Bodegisl, with those witl1 which he was otherwise familiar, this does not seem to have
Sigibert's dux (governor), and to Bodegisl's wife, Palatina,l9 To Lupus, an- been the case. In addition to Radegund, who had been a queen, a couple of
other of Sigibert's governors, he wrote three very long poems, and he ad- the nuns at Holy Cross were Merovingian princesses. Institutionally as well,

dressed another to Lupus's brother. 2 For Dynamius of Marseille, another Holy Cross had close connections with the royal court, especially that of
aristocrat connected to the Reims/Metz court, he composed two poeins. 21 ReimsjMetz. 26 When Radegund wanted the relic of the Holy Cross for her
And so on. Nor were these affiliations separate from episcopal circles. Gre- monastery, she applied to King Sigibert for permission and help. When the
gory ofTours, for example, knew the father ofPalatina: he was bishop Gal- bishop of Poitiers refused to install the relic, Sigibert was the Icing who or-
lomagnus, and Gregory praised him for his devotion to Gregory's own dered Eufronius ofTours to place it in her monastery. Baudonivia, the nun
great uncle, Bishop Nicetius ofLyon. 22 from Holy Cross who wrote Radegund's Life circa 6oo, made clear that
Forturlatus stayed on for a time at Sigibert's court, accompanying the Radegund commended her monastery to the churches of the realm, its bish-
Icing down the Mosel River after the wedding. 23 But soon thereafter he left ops, and its lcings, but most specifically "to the very serene lady Queen
Austrasia, traveling first to Paris, where he found King Charibert and Brunhild. She loved [dilexit] [the lcings and queen] with dear affection [caro
praised him in a poem, and then to Tours, where Gregory's cousin Eufro- affectu]?'27 To be sure, when Baudonivia was writing, Brunhild was the main
nius held the episcopal see. 24 By the end of 567 or the beginning of 568 For- power on tl1e scene. Nevertheless, tl1e passage suggests that Fortunatus's
tunatus had settled at Poitiers, where he became a priest and established close relationship with Holy Cross did not take him far from his usual
himself as a friend of- and poet for- two religious women: Radegund, for- courtly haunts.
merly queen-consort of Clothar, who, having left her husband for the reli- While at Poitiers, Fortunatus kept in contact with his former patrons and
developed new ones. His panegyric to Chilperic and Fredegund when Gre-
gory was brought to trial at Berny-Riviere was not, for example, his only
17. Verena Epp insists, by contrast, on Fortunatus's use of the word amor as synonym for poem to that king and queen. 28 It was in Fortunatus's interest-and part of
amicitia; Epp, "Miilmerfreundschaft und Frauendienst bei Venantius Fortunams;' in Varia- his ideology of dulcedo- to smooth over differences between brothers and
tionen der Liebe. Historische Psychologie der Geschlechterbeziehung, ed. Thomas Kornbichler and half-brothers with words of soothing tranquillity. Yet when all is said and
Wolfgang Maaz, Forum Psychohistorie 4- (Tiibingen, 1995), p. 14-. Certainly amor is impor-
done, the main recipients of Fortunatus's poems were tlwee in number: the
tant, and, as we have seen in chapters I and 2, it is closely tied to dulcis, which is a term of en-
dearment for those who are loved. On the many meanings ofFormnams's dulcet:W, see God-
nuns at Holy Cross, Gregory ofTours, and the members of the Reims/Metz
man, Poets and Emperors, pp. 16-21. court. The latter remained an important source of patronage for Fortunatus
18. Fortunams, Poems 7.1-4-, ed. Reydellet, 2:85-90. even after Sigibert's death in 575, for the lcingdom came under Brunhild's
19. Fortunatus, Poems 7.5-6, ed. Reydellet, 2:90-93. control, and it remained largely hers even when her son and grandsons were
20. Fornmams, Poems 7.7-w, ed. Reydellet, 2:94--102.
21. Fornmams, Poems 6.9-10, ed. Reydellet, 2:80-84-. On Dynan1ius, see Reydellet's biog-
raphical note, ibid., pp. 180-81 and n. 104-. 25. On Fortunatus's friendship with these women, see Epp,Amicitia, pp. 74--76.
22. Greg. Tur., VP 8.8, p. 24-8. For Nicetius's relationship to Gregory, see Wood, Gregory of 26. Nelson suggests ("Gendering Courts;' p. 176) that Holy Cross was a satellite (or, as she
Tours, pp. 6-7. puts it, "an ancillary form") of the royal court.
23. Fortunatus, Poems 6.8, ed. Reydellet, 2:77-79; for the date, see ibid., p. r8o n. 93. 27. Baudonivia, Vita Sanctae Radegundis 16, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 2, p. 389.
24-. The poem praising Charibert is Fornmams, Poems 6.2, ed. Reydellet, 2:53-57; Fortuna- 28. Fortunams, Poems 9.1-3, ed. Leo, pp. 201-w; ibid., 9.4-, p. 210 is an epitaph for
tus wrote three poems to Eufronius, ibid., 3-1-3, 1:81-86. Chilperic and Fredegund's young son Chlodobert.

106 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { 107
on the throne. (She outlasted both Gregory and Fortunatus.) Mter a trip in and decorated ... as brightly as they had been before.''37 We have already
587 to Metz, in the company of Gregory to negotiate the Treaty of Andelot seen that he built a new baptistery for this church. Gregory's Histories were
between Guntram, Brunhild, and her son Childebert II, Fortunatus wrote in part written to demonstrate Martin's patronage and protection of the
five poems to the queen and her son, filled with lavish praise. 29 Touraine, while the Miracles of Saint Martin was tl1e first work that he com-
As for Gregory: "the first thirty years or so of [hisJ life must largely be posed as bishop of Tours-indeed, his first published work altogether.3B
defined in terms of saints' cults;' to borrow tl1e words oflan Wood.3 There And both Gregory and his mother found cures at Martin's tomb. 39 The
were tl1ree saints in particular to whom Gregory was devoted: Benignus, emotions that he associated with Martin were far more complex and an-
Julian, and Martin. The cult of Benignus was Burgundian. Its center was guished than those connected with Julian. 40
Dijon, and it had been promoted actively by Gregory ofLangres, Gregory's Thus both Fortunatus and Gregory had experienced a variety of commu-
great-grandfatl1er. Thereafter Benignus became a family saint. At Clermont, nities (some overlapping) in their younger days. While in the s6os each be-
Gregory's mother kept the vigils of Benignus, saving her household from came attached to one particular community-Fortunatus at Poitiers, Gre-
the plague. 31 Gregmy himself collected Benignus's relics, and, after building gory at Tours-they nevertheless continued to correspond, make visits to
a new baptistery alongside tl1e church of Saint Martin at Tours, he placed one another at home, and meet in common "outside" venues, such as
those relics in the old baptistery, in this way associating two of his favorite Berny-Riviere and Metz. They did not agree on all things: Gregory excori-
patrons. 32 ated Bishop Felix of Nantes, while Fortunatus wrote admiring poems to
The cult ofJulian had its center at Brioude, which Gregory visited early Felix, affirming the "affection of an admirer" (affectu fautoris). 41 But people
in his life on family pilgrimages. 33 On one of these journeys, he experienced do not have to be in accord on all matters to be part of the same emotional
a terrible headache, cured only by the waters of tl1e stream near which Julian community; they have merely to hold similar values and express them ac-
had been decapitated, about 1% miles from Brioude. "I depart healthy;' cording to similar norms. In the rest of this chapter I propose to explore the
Gregory reported, "and joyfully [laetus] I enter [Julian's church, going] common emotional community ofGregory and Fortunatus: its parameters,
right up to the tomb of the glorious martyr.'' 34 Gregory's brother, Peter, was assumptions, and modes of expression. I hope to explain the two men's easy
cured of a fever at this same tomb. 35 Gregmy called himself the "foster familiarity. But I do not claim that their common emotional community
child" (alumnus) of Julian, and he brought some of the saint's relics to his was the only one in which these men felt comfortable. Nor do I claim that it
episcopal see atTours.36
Nevertl1eless, tl1e main saintly presence at Tours was St. Martin, who had
37. Greg. Tur., Histories ro.3r.18, p. S3S
been bishop there in the fourth century. Gregory was deeply involved in
38. See Van Dam, Saints and Their Miracles, esp. pp. 6S-67.
honoring the saint both professionally and personally. "I found tl1e walls of
39. For his mother's cure: Greg. Tur., VM 3.ro, p. 18s; for his own cures: ibid., 1.32, 2.1,
the holy church [of Martin] damaged by fire, which I ordered to be painted 2.60, pp. 154, 1S9, 179-80.
40. See Barbara H. Rosenwein, "The Places and Spaces of Emotion:' in Uomo e Spazio nel-
29. Fortunatus, Poems ro.7-9, app. s-6, ed. Leo, pp. 239-44, 279-80. For the dates and cir- l'alto medioevo, Settimane di studio del Centra Italiano di Studi Sull'alto medioevo so (Spo-
cumstances, see George, Venantius Fortunatus, pp. 33, 97, n. r. leto, 2003), pp. sos-36. On the different circumstances of the cults, nature of the miracles,
30. Wood, Gregory ofTours, p. 8. See also Van Dam, Saints and Their Miracles, chap. 2. and Gregory's p~rsonal stakes in the cases of St. Julian and St. Martin, see Danuta, Shanzer,
31. Gregory ofTours, Liber in gloria martyrum so, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 1/2, p. 74 "So Many Saints -So Little Time ... the Libri Miraculorum of Gregory of Tours:' Journal of
(hereafter Greg. Tur., GM). Medieval Latin 13 (2003): esp. 27-37.
32. Greg. Tur., Histories ro.3I.I8, p. S3S 41. Greg. Tur., Histories s.s, p. 2oo; Fortunams, Poems 3.4-10, ed. Reydellet, 1:86-ros,
33 Gregory of Tours, Liber de passione et virtutibus sancti ]uliani martyris 24-2s, ed. Bruno quote from 3.4, p. 88. Willian1 C. McDermott argues that "the relations between Felix and
Krusch, MGH SRM 1j2, pp. 124-2s (hereafter Greg. Tur., V]). Gregory were at times quite friendly:' but the suggestion largely relies on rehabilitating the
34. Greg. Tur., V] 2s, p. 12s. character of Felix and then assuming that two dedicated bishops could not have been at log-
3S Greg. Tur., V] 24, p. I2S. gerheads all the time; McDermott, "Felix of Nantes: A Merovingian Bishop:' Traditio 31
36. Greg. Tur., V] 34-3s, pp. 128-29. (197s): 19.

ro8 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { I09
was exclusive to them; we shall in due course see others who shared their that I raised you so sweetly [dulciter]; Contend against tl1e wrong done to
emotional styles. me, I beg you, and with keen zeal avenge the death of my father and
mother.''49 When Ingund wants her husband Clothar I to marry off her sis-
DULCEDO ter Aregund to a worthy groom, Clothar weds Aregund himself and then
Grouping Fortunatus and Gregory together in the same emotional commu- reports back to Ingund: "I thought about how to carry out the favor that
nity is almost counterintuitive. Fortunatus is known for dulcedo and flattery, your sweetness [tua dulcitudo] asked of me. And in seeking a man who was
Gregory for irony and satire. 42 Yet the flatterer must be attuned to social rich and wise to whom I should join your sister, I found no one better than
norms if his writings are to glamorize, and the ironist must play off of the myself.''50 In the case of two citizens of Tours, Sichar and Chramnesind,
same if his audience is to feel indignation. Dulcedo served both men. who patched up a deadly feud so well that they "ate together and slept in the
Dear to Fortunatus for its ennobling meanings, dulcedo in his hands em- same bed;' Sichar is quoted as saying at one of their meals, "You ought to
phasized the virtues of eloquence, power, and morality, at the same time ex- give me a lot of thanks, oh very sweet brother [dulcissime frater ], for killing
pressing Fortunatus's approval and affection. 43 To Lupus he wrote, "0 your relatives; ever since you received the composition for it, gold and silver
name of Lupus, sweet [dulce] to me and always worth repeating, 1 ... the abounds in your house.'' At these words, Chramnesind turned out the lights
man whom the indestructible arc of my breast guards, once [he is Jincluded and killed his companion. 51
on the tablets of sweetness [dulcedinis] within.''44 He complimented King In these instances Gregory contrasted the tenderness of the overt senti-
Charibert for his dulcedo because he protected and nurtured the widow and ments with the violence or violation that hid behind it. But none of these
daughters of King Childebert, his uncle. 45 At Berny-Riviere he addressed episodes would have had any shock value if people did not ordinarily ex-
King Chilperic as "sweet head" (dulce caput). 46 In all of this was some inten- press real love with words of sweetness. Thus Gregory, who surely was not
tional hyperbole; Fortunatus was lmowingly exaggerating-while at the present when Sichar spoke to his "brother" Chramnesind, nevertheless fab-
same time reveling in- an ancient ideal of friendship. His audience under- ricated Sichar's fawning remark in order to complete his cozy scene, to
stood this and played along.47 which he might contrast Sichar's insensitive teasing and Chranmesind's re-
Dulcedo is not normally associated with Gregory but nevertheless comes venge.
up frequently in his writings. 48 In his Histories it often has a satirical quality. Thus tl1e word dulcedo was a well-lmown shorthand for affection even in
Thus Queen Clotild is shown inveigling her sons to avenge the death of her Gregory's works. Nor was this true only in ironic passages. When he tells us
parents by saying to them: "Don't let me regret, dearest ones [carissimi], about the Auvergnat aristocrat Injuriosus, who wedded a girl who wished
to remain a virgin, Gregory recounts how the young man listened sympa-
thetically to her wedding-night pleas: she had tl10ught to remain chaste for-
42. Goffart, Narrators, pp. 17S-22S.
ever; her tears will never end; she will be unfaithful to her real spouse in
43 On the many meanings of Fortunatus's dulcedo, see Godman, Poets and Emperors,
pp. 16-2r.
44. Fortunatus, Poems 7.8, 11. 33-36, ed. Reydellet, 2:98: "0 nomen mihi duke Lupi replic- 49. Greg. Tur., Histories 3.6, pp. ro1-2: "Non me paeneteat, carissimi, vos dulciter enu-
abile semper I quodque mei scriptum pagina cordis habet, 1 quem semel inclusum tabulis trisse; indignate, quaeso, injuriam meam et patris matrisque mortem sagaci studio vinde-
dulcedinis intus non abolenda virum pectoris area tenet?' cate?'
4S Fortunatus, Poems 6.2, I. 23, ed. Reydellet, 2:54. so. Ibid., 4.3, pp. 136-37: "Tractavi mercidem illam inplere, quam me tua dulcih1do ex-
46. Fortunatus, Poems 9.1, I. 33, ed. Leo, p. 202. petiit. Et requirens vinun divitem atque sapientem, quem tuae sorori deberem adjungere,
47. For this ideal of friendship, see Jaeger, Ennobling Love; and Epp,Amicitia. nihil melius quam me ipsum inveni?' On this episode, see Danuta Shanzer, "History, Ro-
48. The Concordance de l'Historia Francorum de Gregoire de Tours, ed. Denise St.-Michel, 2 mance, Love, and Sex in Gregory of Tours' Decem libri historiarum," in The World ofGregory
vols. (Montreal, [1979]), s.v. "dulcedo;' reveals fifteen uses ofdulcedo (and variants) in Greg. ofTours, ed. Kathleen Mitchell and Ian Wood (Leiden, 2002), p. 412.
Tur., Histories. To this may be added, culled from the on-line Patrologia Latina data base: two sr. Greg. Tur., Histories 9.19, p. 433: "Magnas mihi debes referre grates, o dulcissime frater,
instances in his GM, four in GC, four in VM, twelve in the VP, yielding a total of thirty-seven eo quod interfecerim parentes tuos, de quibus accepta compositione aurum argentumque su-
instances in those of his writings that have been digitized. perabundat in domum tuam?'

no} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { m
heaven and thus lose eternal life. At last Injuriosus turns to her and says: "By Let us note tl1e parallels between Gregory and Fortunatus's easy use of
your very sweet arguments [dulcissimis eloquiis] eternal life illuminates me dulcisjdulcedo as terms of affection and the practices of some mourners at
like a great radiance. Therefore, if you wish to abstain from carnal inter- Trier (in chapter 2 ). Gregory was more restrained than his friend, reminding
course, I shall become a partner in your plan."52 us of the reticence of families at Trier, who often used no emotion word
In Gregory's writings mothers often had the word dulcis on their lips as whatever on a tombstone. But those who were more effusive were also very
they spoke tenderly to their children. Gregory's own mother is depicted likely to use dulcissimus to express their affection, often, though not exclu-
doing this. When Gregory was young, he contracted an illness and went to sively, when they commemorated a child. Gregory, too, makes clear the 'I''
the tomb of St. Illidius at Clermont to be cured. But his fever, which abated connection between that word and parental feeling. We may thus raise here I

at the tomb, mounted when he was home again, and his mother said, as the possibility that Gregory and Fortunatus were part of-or, in any event,
Gregory reports, "I will consider this a day of mourning, my sweet son [dul- comfortable with-the emotional community that can be only barely
cis nate], since such a fever lays you low?'53 In the event, to be sure, Gregory glimpsed at Trier through its inscriptions. Gregory and Fortunatus's close
recovered. Similarly, the mother of an infant, despairing of his life, and fear- relations with the nearby Metz/Reims court gives some ballast to the argu-
ing for his unbaptised state, brought the child to the same saint's tomb. He ment.59
called out to his mother: "Come here?' And she, startled both by the sign of
life and by the infant's use of words, replied, "What do you want, my most BEYOND SWEETNESS
sweet son [dulcissime nate] ?"54 Saint Patroclus's mother addressed him in Fortunatus's and Gregory's emphasis on sweetness alerts us to a key element
the same way when he returned home upon the death of his father: "Be- in the complex of feelings that they privileged togetl1er: an intense senti-
hold, your father, my very sweet son [o dulcissime nate], has died; I live with- mentality regarding the love t..'-lat family members-parents and children,
out consolation?'55 This is clearly the way mothers were expected to address brothers and sisters, husbands and wives-felt for one another. Both men
their sons. 56 But dulcis was not exclusive to that relationship. Gregory's imagined these bonds to exist, and this suggests that they did exist or, at any
great-grandmother told her husband not to accept the bishopric of Geneva: rate, were normative and expected in the social circles with which poet and
"My very sweet husband [dulcissime conjux], I ask you to desist from that bishop were familiar. They also imagined close ties between friends. These I:

cause and not seek the episcopacy of the city because I carry in my womb a ties were precious but fragile, needing constantly to be recalled and mas-
bishop conceived by you?' 57 And, as in the case of Fortunatus's friendship saged. "Love"-already long hallowed in the pantheon of emotions-
network, so too in Gregory's: the priest Aridius called Gregory his "very helped make that possible. This is not the place to explore the role oflove in
sweet [dulcissime] brother" even though they were not blood relations. 58 ancient notions of friendship. 60 But it is important to lmow that when, for
example, Fortunatus spoke of being a "lover" (amans) of Bodegisl, he was
;! I, 52. Ibid., 1.47, p 31: "'Dulcissimis: inquid, 'eloquiis tuis aeterna mihi vita tamquam mag-
num jubar inluxit, et ideo, si vis a carnali abstinere concupiscentiam, particeps tuae mentis ef- 59. The inscriptions for Metz itself are too few and too mutilated to be useful. SeeRICG I,
ficiar?" nos. 242-57. However, no. 242 is suggestive, mentioning "irmocens Aspasius dulcissimmus?'
53. Greg. Tur., VP 2.2, p. 220: "Maestum hodie, dulcis nate, sum habitura diem, cum te talis 6o. Pierre Macherey argues that the ancient world usually associated love and friendship,
attenet febris?' but Plato dissociated the two, a dissociation which, according to Macherey, was then made
54. Ibid., 2.4, p. 221: "'Accede hue? ... 'Quid vis: inquit, 'dulcissime nate?"' normative by Christianity; Macherey, "Le 'Lysis' de Platon: dilemme de l'amitie et de
ss. Ibid., 9.1, p. 253: "Ecce genitor tuus, o dulcissime nate, obiit; ego vero absque solatia !'amour:' in IJAmitii. Dans son harmonic) dans ses dissonances) ed. Sophie Jankelevitch and
degeo?' Bertrand Ogilvie (Paris, 1995), pp. 58-75 By contrast, David Konstan sees love-variously de-
! 56. On terms of endearment and words of affection expressed by parents toward their chil- fined-as an element in friendships throughout antiquity and into the Patristic period; Kon- ,I :i
j !
dren during the Merovingian period, see Real, Vies de saints) pp. 430-54. stan, Friendship in the Classical World (Cambridge, 1997). Peter Dinzelbacher rightly argues
57 Greg. Tur., VP, 8.1, p. 241: "Desine, quaeso, dulcissime conjux, ab hac causa, et ne quae- that love in the Early Middle Ages was not the same as that of tl1e twelfth century, but be-
sieris episcopatum urbis, quia ego ex concepto a te sumpto episcopum gero in utero?' cause he seeks a love that is like "our own"- companionate, focused on one other person-
ss. Ibid., 17 praef., p. 278. he overlooks the importance of affection in the earlier period, postulating that the care of in-

n2 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { II3
brother, you alone were to me.'' 67 Turning then to mourn her brother and
drawing upon a well-worn rhetorical and emotional tradition. As C.
accuse herself, the Radegund of the poem presents herself as another
Stephen Jaeger has shown, this sort of love language-and the feeling be-
Canace, guilty of an unspeakable crime, unable to carry out even the rites of
hind it-was understood to ennoble both the lover and the beloved.6l
mourning: "The youth, with a beard still of tender down, is overcome. I I,
Passionate family feeling accompanied by grief was the main theme of
his sister, was not there and did not see the awful funeral. I Not only did I
"The Destruction ofThuringia;' a poem that Fortunatus wrote on behalf of
lose him, but I did not close his pious eyes I nor, lying over him, say the last
Radegund. It was probably meant to form part of her petition to the Byzan-
words. 1I did not make his cold flesh warm by my hot tears I nor take away
tine emperor Justin II to grant fragments of the Holy Cross to her convent
kisses from his dying flesh. I Nor did I tearfully cling to his neck in a heart-
at Poitiers. 62 All the members of Radegund's family had been killed, dis- 68
rending embrace I or, sobbing, caress his body on my unhappy bosom.''
persed, or talcen into custody by the Frankish conquest of Thuringia; she
Love for Amalfrid is thus the love of family; he takes the place of father,
herself as well as her brother had been prizes of war. Married to King
mother, sister, and brother. But let us move for a moment from the high-
Clothar I, she left him when the king "afterward unjustly had her brother
flown rhetoric of Radegund's lament to the writings of others whose emo-
killed by wicked men;' as Gregory tells the story. 63 She "turned to God" and
tional worlds intersected with that of Gregory and Fortunatus. "The De-
was consecrated to the religious life by Bishop Medard of Soissons.
struction of Thuringia" may be compared to Queen Bnmhild's letter to
Written in tl1e form of a plea to her cousin Amalfrid, who had escaped
Emperor Maurice, written a few years later. There she speaks of her little
the Thuringian war and found refuge in Byzantium, tl1e poem casts Rade-
grandson Athanagild, who was at Constantinople. He is, she says, all she
gund as a tragic heroine modeled on the fictional Heroides on whose behalf
has now that her daughter Ingund has died, victim of the civil wars in
Ovid wrote reproachful letters to absent loved ones. 64 Here the tragedy of
Spain. "I do not lose a daughter entirely;' writes Brunhild, "if my exalted
Thuringia is explicitly linked to that ofTroy.65 The poem is full of Rade-
progeny [namely Athanagild] is preserved.'' She calls on him as her "very
gund's tears: "I alone survive to weep for all the rest. 1Nor am I compelled
dear grandson" (nepus carissime). She can see in his eyes her own "sweet
to mourn only my dead relatives. I I weep for those too whom kind life 69
spares."66 She recalls the artless love that once bound her and Amalfrid. "Re- daughter" (dulcis filia) -though in fact she has never seen the child at all.
member, Amalfrid, how in those early years of yours I when I was your
67. Ibid., 11. 47-52, p. 272: "vel memor esto, tuis primaevis qualis ab annis, I Hamalafrede,
Radegund? I How much you as a sweet child once loved [dilexeris J me!
tibi tunc Radegundis eram, quantum me quondam dulcis dilexeris infans I et de fratre patris
I ... What my dead father could have been, or my mother, or sister or nate, benigne parens. 1 Quod pater extinctus poterat, quod mater haberi, quod soror aut
frater tu mihi solus eras?'
68. Ibid., 11. 133-40, p. 274: "percutimr juvenis tenera lanugine barbae, I absens nee vidi fu-
fants during rl1is early period was lacking in affectivity ("di carenze affettive"), itself the result
nera dira soror. 1 Non solum amisi, sed nee pia lumina clausi I nee superincumbens ultima
of impoverishment and the harshness of daily life; Dinzelbacher, "La donna;' p. 234.
verba dedi, 1frigida non calido tepefeci viscera fletu, I oscula nee caro de moriente mli, I am-
6r. Jaeger, Ennobling Love; for the poem to Bodegisl, see note 91 below.
plexu in misero neque collo flebilis haesi I aut fovi infausto corpus anhela sinu?' As Bulst
62. Baudonivia, Vita Sanctae Radegundis r6, p. 388.
points out ("Radegundis an A.malafred;' p. 377), rl1e passage has striking parallels to Ovid,
63. Greg. Tur., Histories 3.7, p. ros: "cuius fratrem postea injuste per homines iniquos oc-
Heroides u, I. us, trans. Grant Showerman, rev. G. P. Goold, Loeb Classical Library (Cam-
cidit?' But as Fornmatus tells it, at rl1e same time that Clothar ordered the brother to be
bridge, Mass., 1986), p. 140, which is the lan1ent of Canace to her brorl1er, whose;child she
killed, Radegund was "directed" (directa) by him to ask Bishop Medard of Soissons "to con-
has borne, that she could not carry out the proper rites on behalf of her child, 'who was
secrate her to the Lord?' It was his proceres (leading men) who tried to hold her back. See For-
tunatus, Vita Sanctae Radegundis 12, ed. Bmno Kmsch, MGH SRM 2, p. 368. thrown to wild beasts by her father.
69. Epistolae Austrasicae, 27, ed. Wilhelm Gundlach, MGH Epistolae 3: Epistolae
64. Fornmatus, Poems app. r, ed. Leo, pp. 271-75 (hereafter "Destruction ofThuringia").
merowingici et karolini aevii (1892; repr. Munich, 1994), p. 139: ''Accessit mihi, nepus caris-
For the literary models, see Walther Bulst, "Radegundis an Amalafred;' in Bibliotheca Docet.
sime, votiva magne felicitatis occasio, per quam, cuius aspectum frequenter desidero vel pro
Festgabe for Car! Wehmer (Amsterdam, 1963), pp. 369-80.
parte relevor, cum directis epistulis amabilibus illis oculis repraesentor, in quo mihi, quam
65. Fortunatus, "Destruction ofThuringia;' I. 19, p. 27r.
peccata subduxerunt, dulcis filia revocamr; nee perdo natam ex integro, si, praestante
66. Ibid., 11. 36-38, p. 272: "ut flerem cunctis una superstes ago. 1 Nee solum extinctos
cogor lugere propinquos: I hos quoque, quos retinet vita benigna, fleo?' Domino, mihi proles edita conservatur?'

The Poet and the Bishop { ns


II4 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
The mother-child bond is paramount as well in Baudonivia's Life of Rade- was so affected that their "mourning (planctus) took over the very
gund. Radegund had no biological children, but she told the nuns at Holy psalmody?' Baudonivia explained: "They rendered tears (lacrimas) for the
Cross: "I have chosen you to be my daughters. You are my light, my life, my psalms, a groan (mugitum) for the canticle, and a sigh (gemitum) for the al-
respite, and my entire happiness rfelicitas] ?'70 leluia?'74 Similarly, one of Fortunatus's patrons, Dynamius, wrote a Life of
We have already seen that Gregory's writings assume that families were St. Maximius in which the parents of a boy killed by the bite of a rabid dog
bound by strong and loving emotions. His own uncle Gallus, he tells us, "beat their breasts with their fists" and watered the body with their tears.75
used to visit him as a child when he was gravely ill, showing him a "unique Gregory of Tours was equally willing to talk about the gestures of family
affection" (dilectione unica). This was the context for his mother's loving and feeling. Consider the way in which he depicted the anguish of Queen Fre-
anxious words: "I will consider this a day of mourning?' Gregory responded degund confronted with the illness of her sons: striking her breast with her
tenderly in turn, recognizing her feelings: "Don't, I truly beg of you, be sad fists, clearly a topos of grief, as we have seen, Fredegund repented her sin-
[contristeris], but tal<e me back to the tomb of blessed bishop Illidius. For I fulness.76 Gregory's dislike ofFredegund is well known, but when he came
believe, and it is my faith, that his power will bring happiness [laetitiam] to to describing her feelings as a mother, he imagined them to be fiercely lov-
you and health to me?'71 ing. We need not assume that Gregory was reporting facts: he was reporting
When Fortunatus wrote to Gregory about walking a path that St. Martin what he considered appropriate for mothers- even wicked mothers- to
trod, he dwelt long on a chance meeting on the road. He came across a fa- feel.
ther and mother who, he said, "mourn [lugent] their daughter with weep- Gregory also tells us-again, coloring his account with his own emo-
ing [fletibus ], filling the air with their cries and covering their cheeks with tional expectations-about the public mourning that took place at Paris
tears [lacrimando ]?' Through their sobs and sighs they barely managed to when Fredegund's son died: "Great indeed was the lamentation rplanctus]
explain to Fortunatus that their daughter had been sold into slavery. "Inves- of all the people; for the men were mourning [lugentes] and the women
tigate, follow up;' Fortunatus wrote to Gregory, "and if it be otherwise than were dressed in the mourning apparel that was normally worn for following
it should be, sweet one and father, deliver her and join her to your flock. Re- husbands to the grave?' 77 This was the counterpart to Fortunatus's evoca-
turn her also to her father?' 72 Like Gregory the Great's vir Dei) Fortunatus tion of public joy in his poems. We began this chapter with his celebration
was clearly moved by tears and extremely concerned about the salvation of of Gregory's consecration: ''Applaud, you happy rfelices] people .... For
souls. But Fortunatus's motive was not quite the same as Gregory's "conde- here comes the hope [spes] of the flock, the father rpater] of the people?'
scension of emotion"; he was most concerned about the family separation. Gregory's model for the funeral cortege at Paris was not, however, that of
Baudonivia voiced the same concern about the metaphorical family of mourning blood relations; it was of marital feeling. The women following
nuns at the convent of the Holy Cross when Radegund died. The nuns Fredegund wore widows' weeds. For both Gregory and Fortunatus, the
stood around her body, "weeping and wailing [flentes et heiulantes], beating
their chests with hard fists and stones?'73 At her funeral the congregation 74. Ibid., 24, p. 393: "Dum sub muro cum psallentio sanchlm eius corpus portarehlr, quia
instih!erat, ut nulla vivens foras monasterio januam egrederehlr, tota congregatio supra
70. Baudonivia, Vita Rndegundis 8, p. 383: "Vos elegi fllias, vos, mea lumina, vos, mea vita, murum lamentans, ita ut planch!s eorum superaret ipsum psallentium, pro psalmo lacrimas,
vos, mea requies totaque felicitas?' pro cantico mugihlm et gemihlm pro alleluia reddebant?'
71. Greg. Tur., VP 1.2, p. 220: "'Nihil; inquid, 'prorsus, obsecro, contristeris, sed ad sepul- 75. Dynamius, Vita SanetiMaximii ro, PL So, col. 38: ''Adsunt parentes, pugnis sua verber-
chrum [m] me remitte beati Illidii pontificis. Credo enim, et fides mea est, quod virh!s eius ant pectora, ora lacrymis usque adeo rigant super filio?'
et tibi laetitiam et mihi tribuat sospitatem?" 76. Greg. Tur., Histories 5.34, p. 240; the image recalls Vergil,Aeneas 4, 1. 673, where Dido's
72. Forhlnahls, Poems 5.14, 11. 7-8, 21-22, ed. Reydellet, 2:39: "fletibus hue lugent genitor sister beats her breast when she understands the real reason for the pyres, altars, and fires at
genetrixque puellam I voce inplendo auras et lacrimando genas .... Discute, distringe ac, si Carthage.
sit secus, eripe dulcis et pater adde gregi: hanc quoque redde patri?' 77 Greg. Tur., Histories 5.34, p. 241: "Magnus quoque hie planchls omni populo fuit; nam
73 Baudonivia, Vita Rndegundis 21, p. 392: "luctuosa circa eius thorum flentes et heiu- viri lugentes mulieresque lucubribus vestimentis induit, ut solet in conjugum exsequiis fieri,
lantes, pectora duds pugnis et lapidibus ferientes?' ita hoc funus sunt prosecuti?'

n6 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { II7
love and affection between spouses was no less great than that between par- self-forgetfulness, she remembered me. The humor of her cheeks exhausted
ents and children. This expectation was very clear, for example, in Fornma- by her continuous tears, I the earth swam with the waters from her [now]
tus's poem praising virginity, written on the occasion of Agnes's consecra- parched eyes. I And because living she was unable to see me by her carnal
tion as abbess of Holy Cross. The poem speaks of motherly and wifely love eyes, she lovingly [amata] sent up prayers;''Sl
in precisely parallel terms. Both are intense, passionate, and- because of And there are more tears still when, in the middle of the poem, we read
human mortality-bound to be disappointed. First Fortunatus invokes the Agnes's purported "letter" to Christ, a sort of spousal counterpart to Rade-
feelings of the mother of a stillborn child: she is sad (tristis); she bewails gund's plea to Amalfrid. Responding to the letter, Christ says: "When she
(dolens) her double loss: her motherhood and her maidenhood. Unlike lay on the ground, resting but not overcome by sleep, 1 I often lay down
most mothers, whose own tears are comforted by the crying of the new- with her to take care of her. 1 I shared her grief [condolui]; I wiped away her
born, the mother of a stillborn can find no solace at al1.78 And what if her river of tears [lacrimarum flumina ], 1 giving her kisses [oscula] sweetened by
child lives, but not for long? Then the distraught mother, hair disheveled shining honeycombs;''82 She is then elected into heaven and as queen joins
(jlagellatis . .. capillis) "presses her dry breasts against the lips of her dead Christ in the nuptial chamber.
[child]. 1 Pouring out tears, she passionately revives her laments, 1 and she We see the privileging of the same sort of emotional expression at Holy
washes the cold body with a warm fountain [of tears ]?'79 Like Radegund's Cross itsel With less hyperbole than Fortunatus, but much the same ap-
nuns, like Fredegund, the bereaved mother clutches at her face, pulls her proval, Baudonivia describes Radegund's love for Christ. The queen applied
hair, beats her breast. herself to her prayers, despised the throne of the fatherland, conquered the
Tellingly, in the same poem by Fortunatus, this is not much differ:ent sweetness (dulcedinem) of marriage, and shut out worldly love (caritatem
from the grieving gestures of the wife when her husband dies, though here mundialem ). If the king were to want her back, as she feared, she would pre-
sexual love adds additionql pathos, as the new widow "holds the cold mem- fer to end her life, because now she was in the embrace (amplexus) of the ce-
bers for which she once glowed;'' She laments (miserando) before his tomb; lestial King. 83 She "handed herself over to her celestial Spouse with such
she presses his bones; she mourns him (luget) with wet weeping (jletibus in- complete love [toto amore] that ... she felt Christ to be an inhabitant within
riguis).BO her;''84
With Fortunatus's easy blurring of the lines between this world and the Similar sentiments, albeit expressed with still greater restraint, appear in
next, consecrated virginity itself is envisioned as a passionate-and (hap- Gregory's writings as well. Recall his depiction of the wedding night ofln-
pily) uniquely eternal-marriage. Christ the spouse spealcs in this same juriosus and his bride. Dulcis is not the only emotion word in the tale. When
poem on virginity, describing how Agnes waited for him: "She lay as the two lie down on the marriage bed together, she is very sad (contristata).
though in vigil, in case I came from somewhere, 1pressing her cold limbs on Sighing, weeping copiously, she reveals that she had made marriage to
I
the now tepid marble. 1 She, turned to ice, preserved my fire in her bones. I
1

While her inward parts are frozen, her breast glows with love [amore ]. 1De-
Sr. Fortunatus, Poems S.3, ll. 2u-2o, ed. Reydellet, 2:13S-3'9: "pervigil incubuit, si forte ali-
I
'I spising her body, she would sink down to the bare ground and, as she lay in cunde venirem, 1marmore iam tepido frigida membra premens. I Haec gelifacta meum ser-
vavit in ossibus ignem: 1visceribus rigidis pectus amore calet. 1 Corpore despecto recubabat
in aggere nudo I seque ob!ita jacens me m emor ipsa fuit. I Fletibus adsiduis exhausto humore
7S. Fortunatus, Poems S.3, ll. 342, 346, 34S, ed. Reydellet, 2:144. genarum I siccatis oculis terra natabat aquis. I Et quia me vivens carnali lumine quondam I
I
79. Fortunatus, Poems S.3, ll. 359-62, ed. Reydellet, 2:145: "Triste flagellatis genetrix orbata cernere non potuit, misit amata precem?'
capillis I defuncti in labiis ubera sicca premit; I infundens lacrimas lamenta resuscitat ardens I S2. Fortunatus, Poems S.3, ll. 253-56, ed. Reydellet, 2:140: "Cum recubaret humo neque
'Ij
et gelidum corpus fonte tepente lavat." victa sopore quievit, I consulitums ei saepe simul jacui, I condolui pariter, lacrimarum flu-
So. Fortunatus, Poems S.3, ll. 373-74, 377-7S, 3S1, ed. Reydellet, 2:145: "De thalamo ad tu- mina tersi, 1oscula clans rutilis mellificata favis?'
mulum, modo candida, tarn cito nigra 1ante quibus caluit frigida membra tenet, I ... Saepe S3. Baudonivia, VitaRadegundis 4, p. 3Sr.
maritalem repetit miserando sepulchrum I contemptaque domo funus amata colit. I ... S4. Ibid., 5, p. 3S2: "ita se toto amore caelesti tradidit Sponso, ut Deum mundo cmde con-
Fletibus inriguis, perituro carmine, luget?' plectens, Christum in se habitatorem esse sentiret?'

uS } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { II9
Christ the centerpiece of her life. 85 Repudiating the vanities of the world Similarly we can never lmow if friends loved one another passionately.
with passion-they "horrify'' (horrent) her; she "spits on" (respuo) the vast But we can be sure that they esteemed such bonds. They patronized Form-
lands her husband holds-she makes the misery of her worldly marriage natus because he expressed and celebrated such feelings in a most pleasing
bed the inverse of the felicity of the marriage that counts. Marriage is a pas- style. 90 When Fortunatus wrote about Duke Bodegisl, he said, "By your
sionate affair; hers happens to be with Christ. 86 sweet speech you have satisfied the heart of a lover [amantis]: I For your
Thus far we have looked only at celestial marriages. Brunhild's, however, words give food to me, your devoted one."91 To dux Lupus he wrote: "What
is frankly of this world. Fortunatus considers how Sigibert and Brunhild father and mother, brother, sister, the line of nephews- I what a locality
must feel about one another before their wedding. The Icing is in love could do-you fulfill by your dutiful love [amore pio]?'92 What exactly was
(amans), seized by fire (igne) for his bride. She desires (cupit) him as well, fulfilled by this dutiful love? In a letter to Gogo, Fortunatus wrote: "You
though modesty (verecundia) holds her back.87 Cupid hovers over all, let- root out the groans [gemitus] of the afflicted and plant joys [gaudia] ?'93 In
ting loose his "love-bearing'' (amoriferas) arrows; he "inflames" (perurit) all the context, it was Fortunatus himself who had been "afflicted" and then
creatures on earth, the commoners quickly, the Icing more slowly. At night, made joyful. In a poem to Agnes, love was clearly desexualized through the
waiting for his Brunl1ild, Sigibert lies in the embraces (per amplexum) of the evocation of family feeling: "Mother to me in honor, but sweet sister in love
image of his wife-to-be. ss [amore] 1 whom I cherish [colo] with piety, faith, heart, and soul, I with ce-
Did Sigibert really love Brunhild? It is impossible to know. But with lestial affection [caelesti affectu ], not any sin of the body?'94 That love could
William Reddy we may admit that in any case all emotions statements are tip into the sexual realm, however, everyone lmew; hence the whispers that
approximations of the truth. Certainly we can be sure that Sigibert liked to followed Fortunatus andAgnes. 9 5 Hence too the care Bishop Nicetius took
hear that he loved his bride, that he was glad to have those assembled at his not to allow his nalced body to touch his grandnephew Gregory of Tours
wedding imagine that he did, and that Fortunatus's poem evoked an emo- when he took the boy into bed witl1 him to embrace him "with the sweet-
tional scenario pleasing to all. His epithalamium tells us about the image of ness of paternal affectio~" (paternae dilectionis dulcedine ). 96
married love prized at Sigibert's court. 89 That is information enough for the
historian. Indeed, it is more valuable than lmowing whether Sigibert loved
90. On the aestl1etic appeal of this kind of writing, see Michael Roberts, The Jeweled Style:
Brunl1ild. Poetry and Poetics in Late Antiquity (Itl1aca, N.Y., 1989 ). I am grateful to David Nirenberg for
the reference.
9I. Fortunatus,Poems 7.5, ll. 7-8, ed. Reydellet, 2:9r: "Colloquia dulci satiasti pectus aman-
85. Greg. Tur., Histories L47, pp. 30-3r.
tis: 1nam mihi devoto dant tua verba cibum?'
86. Nevertheless even her worldly marriage is one of great tenderness-at least as Gregory
92. Fortunatus, Poems 7.9, ll. n-12, ed. Reydellet, 2:wr: "Quod pater ac genetrix, frater,
tells it in Greg. Tur., GC 31, p. 317. Here the emphasis is on the end of the relationship. Even soror, ordo nepotum, 1quod poterat regia, solvis amore pio?'
while lying dead in an open tomb, the wife gently teases her husband about their secret life of 93. Fortunatus, Poems 7.1,!. 17, ed. Reydellet, 2:86: "Emis adflictis gemitus et gaudia plan-
chastity. Not much later, the husband dies as well, and the two tombs, originally placed in
tas?'
different parts of a church, move togethe~ of their own accord. Thereafter the couple is 94. Fortunatus, Poems n.6, ll. r-3, ed. Leo, p. 260: "Mater honore mihi, soror autem dulcis
known as "the two lovers" (duos amantes).
amore, 1 quam pietate fide pectore corde cola, 1 caelesti affectu, non crimine corporis ullo?'
87. Fortunatus, Poems 6.r, ll. sr, 56-57, ed. Reydellet, 2:45-46: "Sigibertus amans Nevertheless, Franca Ela Consolino shows tl1at Fortunatus borrowed without blushing the
Brunichilde carpitur igne; 1... Hoc quoque virgo cupit, quamvis verecundia sexus I ob- erotic vocabulary of pagan lyrical poetry to speak of the nuns at Holy Cross and his relation-
stet .. ?'
ship to them; Consolino, ''Amor spiritualis e linguaggio elegiaco nei Carmina di Venanzio
88. Fortunatus, Poems 6.r, ll. 37-46, ed. Reydellet, 2:45. Marital love was normative for Fortunato;' Annali delta Scuola normale superiore di Pisa, classe di lettere efilosofia 7 (1977): I35I-
Fortunatus: see ibid., 7.6,!. 27, p. 93, where the poet speaks of Duke Bodegisl's feelings for his 68.
wife Palatina: "Eligit e multis quan1 cams amaret amantem" (He [Bodegisl] chose from 95. It is alluded to precisely by Fortunatus's declaration that his love for Agnes is as if for a
among many a loving [wife] whom the dear man might love). mother or sister. See George, Venantius Fortunatus, p. 173.
89. On the importance of expressions of conjugal love in the sixth centuty (and their de- 96. Greg. Tur., VP 8.2, p. 242. For more on the dangers and diversions of sexuality, see
cline in the seventh) see Real, Vies de saints, pp. 348-60.
Shanzer, "Histmy, Romance, Love, and Sex?'
120 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { r2r
Relationships were understood to be fragile, whether due to sexual dan- lay-loving and being loved by their people, along the lines of his poem on
ger (as in the case of Agnes and Fortunatus) or distance (as in the case of Gregory's consecration. In a poem about Lupus, Fortunatus claimed that "if
most of Fortunatus's other literary recipients). The solution was not to anyone carried sorrow [maestitiam] in his troubled breast, 1 after he sees you
forgo love; to the contrary, it was to reaffirm it continually. Fortunatus did he persists in better hope?' 103 On behalf ofl<ing Charibert, he called on the
not break off with Agnes nor suggest prudence: rather he ended his poem people of Paris to "love [dilige] him who reigns in your high citadel 1 and
by vowing to live as he always had -that is, as close to Agnes as before-"as cherish the protector who offers aid to you. 1Embrace [amplectere] him now
long as you wish me to be cherished with sweet love [dulci amore] ?'97 To with eager hands, joyfully cherishing rJavens] him I who is your lord by
Gregory he wrote a poem full of feeling: Gregory "is light for my love right but your father by loving kindness r,pietate ]?'104 Bishops were regularly
[lumen amore meo ]" and holds "the pledge of my friendship [amicitiae invoked as fathers beloved by their children. To Bishop Carentinus of
meae]" in his heart. "I pray;' Fortunatus concludes, "that you be mindful I Cologne Fortunatus wrote, "You comfort the hearts of all with sweet
am yours [me memor esse tuum ]?'98 Yet this entire poem was also sent to a words. 1 You malce sad hearts happy by your visage. I You are food to the
Bishop Baudoaldus. 99 Keeping old fires burning was extremely impor- poor, drink to the thirsty. I Rightly you are father of the people r,pater pop-
tant.100 This had nothing to do with spontaneity or sincerity.101 uli], because you give the treasure of salvation?'105
It was thus a rather small step to go from passionate friendships to pub-
lic forms of love. We have already seen that Gregory's idea of the funeral TURNING LOVE TO HATE

cortege for Fredegund's son was modeled on that of grieving widows. On a The effusions of love in the work of Fortunatus are difficult to reconcile
happier note, Fortunatus imagined Gogo residing at court with his "school with the rapacity, odiousness, and fury that pepper the pages of Gregory's
of acolytes gathered before him, applauding [him] out of love [amore ]?' 102 Histories. But that is because Gregory tended to emphasize the subversion of
Many ofFortunatus's poems evoked regional leaders-whether episcopal or loving norms and expectations rather than celebrate tl1em. 106 He concen-
trated on the moments in which the familial model broke down. Thus we
read in the Histories a whole series of incidents that illustrate hatred rather
97. Fortunatus, Poems 1t.6, 11. 15-16, ed. Leo, p. 261: "sed tamen est animus simili me vivere
voto, I si vos me dulci vultis amore coli?'
tl1an love, starting right with biblical times, when Joseph's visions caused
98. Fortunatus, Poems 5.12, ed. Reydellet, 2:38. his brothers to feel envy (invidia) and hatred (odium) against him.l 07 More
99. Fortunatus, Poems 9.8, ed. Leo, p. 215. Nothing certain is known about Baudoaldus: see recently, Queen Marcatrude, the second wife ofl<ing Gun tram, was jealous
Louis Duchesne, Pastes episcopaux de l'ancienne Gaule, vol. 2, IJAquitaine et les Lyonnaises, 2d (aemula) of his son by his first wife and poisoned the boy. She deserved to
ed. (Paris, 1910 ), p. 477 n. 3 lose her own child and incur tl1e hatred (odium) of the king. 108 I<ing Alboin
I
100. Michael Roberts calls attention to the role ofletters as substitutes for physical contact
I,
in "Venantius Fortunah1s; Elegy on the 'The Death ofGalswintha' (Carm. 6.5);' in Society and
Culture in Late Antique Gaul, ed. Mathisen and Shanzer, p. 308. See Fortunatus, Poems 6.5, I. 103. Fortunatus, Poems 7.7, 11. 9-10, ed. Reydellet, 2:94: "Maestitiam si quis confuso in pec-
227, ed. Reydellet, 2:69: "Saepe tamen missis dulci sibi dulcis adhaesit'' (Often Radegund tore gessit, I postquam te vidit spe meliore manet?'
sweedy clung to her [Galswintha's] sweet self in letters). On the association of friendship 104. Fortunatus, Poems 6.2, 11. 9-12, ed. Reydellet, 2:53: "Dilige regnantem celsa, Parisius,
with warmth, see Epp, Amicitia, pp. 60-61, and on the importance of letter writing to stoke arce I et cole tutorem qui tibi praebet opem. I Hunc modo laeta favens avidis amplectere
the fires, pp. 62-64. See also Ian Wood, "Letters and Letter-Collections from Antiquity to the palmis I qui iure est dominus, sed pietate pater?'
Early Middle Ages: The Prose Works of Avirus ofVienne;' in The Culture ofChristendom: Es- 105. Fortunatus,'Poems 3.14, 11. 17-20, ed. Reydellet, 1:113: "Pectora cunctorum reficis dul-
says in Medieval History in Commemoration of Denis L. T. Bethell, ed. Marc Anthony Meyer cedine verbi, I laetificas vultu tristia corda tuo. I Pauperibus cibus es, sed et esurientibus esca,
(London, 1993), pp. 29-43. I rite pater populi dando salutis opem?'
101. On this point, consider the observation in Reddy, Navigation of Feeling, p. 109, that 106. This is rather close to what Godman, Poets and Emperors, p. 29, argues in his analysis of
sincerity is a "specialized skill" cultivated among certain groups only under particular histor- Fortunatus's poem praising Chilperic, where he suggests that Fortunatus gives the ideal,
ical conditions. Gregory the reality, based on precisely the same criteria.
102. Fortunatus, Poems 7.4, I. 26, ed. Reydellet, 2:90: "cui scola congrediens plaudit amore 107. Greg. Tur., Histories 1.9, p. 10.
sequax?' 108. Ibid., 4.25, p. 156.

122 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { 123
of the Lombards married a woman "whose father he had killed a little while too Gregory assimilated the events to a family drama. Initially unable to get
before. Thus the woman always hated her husband [in odio habensJ and was the two sides to agree on terms (this was before the two men became good
waiting for the moment when she could avenge the wrong done to her fa- friends), Gregory preached: "We have lost sons of the church [aeclesiae fil-
ther.''109 Even public love could turn to hate: thus Bishop Quintianus of ios] . ... Be peaceful sons rftlii pacifici].''llS We have seen how he conceived
Rodez was expelled from his city "out of hatred [odium]" because the people of their subsequent "fraternal" relationship and its breakup.
feared he favored a Frankish takeover. no Both Gregory and Fortunatus were aware that love and hatred could be
Odium is far from exhausting Gregory's thesaurus of unloving emotion manipulated. Gregory's irony was based on just this fact. When he quoted
words. Consider an episode involving King Sigismund of Burgundy. His King Clovis as complaining, "Woe is me who remain like a pilgrim among
second wife was "strongly against" (valide contra) Sigeric, the son of his first foreigners and have no relatives to help me if adversity comes:' he thought
wife. When she put on the very clothes of Sigeric's mother, the boy was the sentiments were pure pretense: "But he said this not sorrowing [con-
"moved by gall" (commotus folie) and told her she was "not worthy'' (non dolens] about the death [of his relatives] but with deceit, [to see] if he could
digna) to wear them. Then the woman, "raging with fury'' (furore succensa) find anyone left to lcill.''ll 6 Less cynically but no less surely, Fortunatus knew
went to Sigismund to accuse Sigeric of treason. She incited the Icing by her that he was creating a dreamworld, an idyll, which his patrons willingly en-
words (instigatverbis) to lcill his son. The family drama here was written up tered with a bit of good hum or on all sides. But the norms were there, ready
as a crescendo-decrescendo of resentment, beginning with the relatively to be felt, or they could not have been exaggerated and celebrated by Fortu-
pale contra, coming to a climax with juror, and dying out with instigo. In the natus, ironized and unmasked by Gregory.
very next sentence the emotional tone was entirely different as Sigismund
repented (paenetens) and, falling over the dead body, began to weep (jlere) EMOTIONAL REFUGES
bitterly. m Thus Fortunatus and Gregory belonged to the same emotional commu-
The very core of Gregory's emotional stance in the Histories, the anguish nity-or, rather, the same Christian, Gallic "subordinate" community in the
(do/or animo) that he records feeling about the civil wars of his day, is above sense discussed in this book's introduction. They exploited its possibilities
all the pain of seeing brother fighting brother.l 12 The first mention of civil in different ways. Because of his episcopal duties, his own self-interest, and
war comes in the third book ~f the Histories, when Childebert and Theude- perhaps, indeed, his character, Gregory focused on love gone sour. It is not
bert, sons of Clovis, unite against their brother Clothar. As soon as Queen by accident that the original sin that he emphasized was Cain's envy (in-
Clotild heard about it, Gregory tells us, "she went to the tomb of the vidia), which led to fratricide. "Then:' Gregory said, "the whole human race
blessed Martin ... praying that civil war not arise between her sons.''ll3 fell to ruin in execrable crimes.''ll 7 Fortunatus played the same strings more
Only once in the ten times that Gregory uses the term "civil war" does he sweetly. His civil wars were due to too much love, mismanaged love. Thus
not tie it to fraternal discord: in the instance of Sichar and Chramnesind, the Chilperic's warmongering was delicately blamed on his father's favoritism:
both loving and feuding citizens ofTours whom we met above,ll4 But here "On you, sweet head, hung every solicitude of your father; I among so
many brothers, you were in this way his one love [amor unus].''ll 8 It was fate
i i
rog. Ibid., 4.41, p. 174: "[Alboenus] duxit conjugem, cuius patrem ante paucum tempus
interfecerat. Qua de causa mulier in odio semper vinun habens, locum opperiebat, in quo rrs. Ibid., 7.47, p. 367.
possit injurias patris ulcisci?' n6. Ibid., 2.42, p. 93: "'Vae mihi, qui tamquam peregrinus inter extraneus remansi et non
no. Ibid., 2.36, p. 84. habeo de parentibus, qui mihi si venerit adversitas, possit aliquid adiuvare? Sed hoc non de
III. Ibid., 35, pp. IOO-IOI. morte horum condolens, sed dolo dicebat, si forte potuisset adhuc aliquem repperire, ut in-
II2. Ibid., 450, p. !87. terficeret?'
n3. Ibid., 3.28, p. 124: "beati Martini sepulchrum adiit, ibique in oratione prosternitur et rr7. Ibid., 1.3, p. 6: "Exhinc nmctum genus in facinus exsecrabile ruit?'
tota nocte vigilat, orans, ne inter filios suos bellum civile consurgeret?' rr8. Fortunatus, Poems g.r, Il. 33-34, ed. Leo, p. 202: "in te, dulce caput, patris omnis cura
II4. Ibid., 747, p. 366. See note 51 above. perpendit; /inter tot fratres sic amor unus eras?'

124 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { 125
that was envious (sors invida), "shattering the spirits of the people and the The bishop, out of "love of God" (in amore Dei) admonished them to con-
treaties of the brothers?' 119 It is perfectly possible to talk about Merovingian vert, speaking gently (blande), overcome by pity (miserando). In the end, he
politics as a matter of interest and power rather than family.uo That no one gave them the choice of conversion or expulsion, and the Jewish odor was
at the time did so is evidence of the dominance of the particular emotional washed away in the waters of baptism. 123 Gregory wrote about the same
assumptions that they lived by. event in the Histories, but he reserved emotions for the end, where tl1e
Fortunatus's poems seem designed to present in extreme form the ex- bishop "cried for joy' and tl1e people rejoicedJ24 It is thus easy to under-
pressive possibilities of his emotional community. If we consider Dy- stand that Fortunatus's expressive powers added to the pleasures of the
namius's Life ofMaximius, for example, we see hugs and kisses, fear, love, bishop.
tears, sorrow, and joy, but not so great a range of vocabulary or richness of There is evidence that Gregory served as a refuge for his friend in turn,
imagery as in, for example, Fortunatus's versified Life of St. Martin.l2I For- though a refuge perhaps more practical than emotional. When Fortunatus
tunatus too could write in a more restrained manner, as he did his in his was sick with fever, he asked "Doctor Gregory'' to bring him aid. 125 Mter
own Lift of Radegund, written before Baudonivia's version. Here there are Agnes died and a rebellion broke out at Holy Cross under the new abbess,
kisses and tears, but no hugs; tl1ere are words for love, sorrow, happiness, the anguished poet wrote to Gregory to intervene, invoking their shared
fear, and anger (on tl1e part of the king), but not for anxiety, laughter, sighs, love ofRadegund, "your daughter and now your mother" (filiae vel iam ma-
blushing, furor, or shame, as we find in his larger corpus.I22 Recall Ekman's tris vestrae ), and looking to tl1e bishop to act like another Martin. 126 We have
basic emotions, discussed in chapter 1; we are not far from his short list in already seen how Fortunatus turned to Gregory when he met parents
Fortunatus's Life ofRadegund. mourning over their enslaved daughter.
Rather than postulate, witl1 Reddy, emotional regimes separate from
emotional refuges, we may thus imagine that one emotional community is Gregory, Fortunatus, Baudonivia, and others of their cohort were far
capable of creating refuges within itself-at its extremes. On one end were more at ease with emotions-all sorts of emotions-than was Gregory the
! t
Fortunatus's poems, which allowed men and women to sink momentarily Great. Although they all belonged to a common Christian culture-antici-
and witl1 pleasure into a welter of "classicized" feelings, passionately pating the joys of heaven, demoting the pleasures of the world- neverthe-
evoked, brilliantly expressed. On the other were the Histories of the cynical less the differences in their emotional assumptions and styles, and thus tl1eir
bishop of Tours, reminding all how emotions could be-and had been- religious expression as well, are striking. To be sure, all saw the family as the
dissembled and managed for effect, but also deeply felt. We can easily see locus of powerful emotions, but Gregory the Great wanted those feelings to
how Fortunatus could serve as a "refuge"- in Reddys sense-for Gregory. be countered and reversed. The pope had one emotional template- he
In Fortunatus's emotion-laden account of Avitus of Clermont's "conver- prized the emotional community of the City of God alone-and wanted all
sion" of the Jews, written, as we saw above, at Gregory's request, the Jews to be assimilated into it. Fortunatus and Gregory of Tours had a broader
were stinking (iudaeus odor amarus) and pricked by fury (stimulante fUrore). emotional palette.
One reason for this may have been their easygoing assumption about the
II9. Fortunatus, Poems 9.1, I. 41, 43, ed. Leo, p. 202: "concutiens animos populomm et closeness of the earthly and heavenly kingdoms. 127 The two friends saw
foedera fratrum?'
120. This is precisely the argument in Stephen D. White, "Clothild's Revenge: Politics,
Kinship, and Ideology in the Merovingian Blood Feud;' in Portraits ofMedieval and Renais- 123. Fortunatus, Poems s.sb, 11. 19, 23, 34, 73, 85, !04, ed. Reydellet, 2:21-24.
sance Living: Essays in Memory ofDavid Herlihy, ed. Samuel K. Colm Jr. and Steven A. Epstein 124. Greg. Tur., Histories s.n, p. 206.
(Ann Arbor, 1996), pp. ro7-30. 125. Fortunatus, Poems 8.n, I. r, ed. Reydellet, 2:153.
r2r. Venantius Fortunatus, Vita Sancti Martini, in Venance Fortunat, Oeuvres, vol. 4, Vie de 126. Fortunatus, Poems 8.12 and 8.r2a, ed. Reydellet, 2:154-55
saint Martin, ed. and trans. Solange Quesnel (Paris, 1996). It is, to be sure, a vety substantial 127. Giselle de Nie argues forcefully for the "continuum between physical and spirimal re-
work, and thus perhaps unfairly compared to Dynamius's short Vita. ality'' in the writings ofGregory; de Nie, Views from a Many-Windmved Tower: Studies ofImag-
122. Fortunatus, Vita Sanctae Radegundis, pp. 364-77. ination in the Works ofGregory ofTours (Amsterdam, 1987), p. rs8.

r26 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { 127
worldly emotions slide easily into precisely similar feelings about God. For- sponded with Pope Gregory the Great.l 31 The same was true of Queen
tunatus reveled in the passions of an Agnes for Christ, and of Christ for Brunhild and her grandsons.l32
Agnes. His lovers burned with ardor, whether they were marrying at the The emotional community of men like Fortunatus and Gregory ofTours
court of Metz or awaiting one another after death at the convent of the may be related to the royal family structure and its fragility in the second
Holy Cross. While Gregory the Great spoke of the plague carrying off little half of the sixth century. Brothers and half-brothers shared a kingdom
children as a temptation for overmuch love, Gregory ofTours lamented in a whose theoretical unity is suggested by Baudonivia's frequent use of the
famous passage about an epidemic of dysentery: ''And indeed, when this word patria, fatherland. However fragmented it may have been in reality, it
disease first began in the month of August, it snatched our young ones and was understood to be a whole. 133 Its rulers, governors, and rectors needed
sent them to their bed. We lost our sweet and dear little children, whom we the tools and metaphors of family bonding to keep this myth in place. Si-
caressed in our laps and carried in our arms and fed with our own gibert and Brunhild, with their imperial pretensions and their monogamous
hands .... But, wiping away our tears, we say with blessed Job, 'The Lord union, required this emotional reinforcement the most keenly. At tl1e same
gave; the Lord hath taken away"' (Job r:zr).l 28 He did not upbraid himself time, they would not have felt the need had not the emotional assumptions
and his contemporaries for weeping. privileging family feeling already been in place. Families are social construc-
The emotional community of Fortunatus and Gregory did not worry tions, and the Merovingian family was more manufacn1red than most, with
about "annoying" thoughts. That idea came from the ascetic tradition of the its multiple royal partners and children. 134 Merovingians were quite adept
Desert Fathers, and neither Fortunatus nor Gregory were ascetics,l29 But at recognizing family relations when it suited them and forgetting them
Baudonivia, whose convent of the Holy Cross followed the strict rule of when they did not.l 35 But they could not have wanted to invoke those rela-
Caesarius of Aries, was potentially heir to that tradition.l30 Yet she showed tions at all, nor would they have been effective in doing so, if family feeling
no signs of its 'influence in her writing. While in Gregory the Great's world were not already a normative sentiment.
feelings were acceptable only when they were put to proper use-to achieve Thus the emotional community represented by Fortunatus and his pa-
I'
salvation for oneself or another-in Baudonivia's world all sorts of emo- trons reinforced the goals of the ruling elite while itself helping to deter- !
tions that were "useless" for the pope were recognized and, if not cele- mine those goals. But in 613 the old regime came to an end when Austrasia
brated, nevertl1eless unabashedly memorialized. Yet for all their differences was talcen over by tl1e Neustrian king Clothar II, son of Fredegund. The
one could "move" easily between the emotional communities of the aristo-' emotional community that next came to the fore was strikingly new.
crats of Austrasia and papal Romans: Dynamius of Marseille, for example,
patron of Fortunatus and writer of at least one saint's Life, also corre- 13r. Gregory I, Registrum 3.33, CCSL 140, p. 179.
132. For Brunhild, see, e.g., ibid., 8.4, CCSLr4oA, pp. 518-21, referring (on p. 519) to letters
..1~8. Greg. Tur., Histories 5.34-, p. 239: "Et quidem primum haec infirmetas a mense Augusto that he had received from the queen in turn; for Theudebert II and Theuderic II, see, e.g.,
mltlata, parvulus aduliscentes arripuit lectoque subegit. Perdedemus du.lcis et caros nobis in- ibid., 6.5I, CCSL I40, pp. 423-24.
fantulos, quos aut gremiis fovimus aut ulnis baiolavimus aut propria manu, ministratis cibis I33 Baudonivia, Vita Radegundis 4 and ro, p. 381: "despexit sedem patriae" (she despised
ipsos studio sagatiore nutrivimus. Sed, abstersis lacrimis, cum beato Job dicimus: 'Dominu~ the throne of the fatl1erland); p. 384: "et patria ne periret" (and the fatherland not perish).
dedit, Dominus abstulit.'" Gregory of Tours always used tl1e singular regnum to refer to the Merovingian realm, even
. 129. Though, on occasion Greg01y adopted some of the rhetorical strategies of the asce- though we rightly see that it was divided into plural regna: on this point see de Nie, Views
tic~; see Conrad Leyser, '"Divine Power Flowed from this Book': Ascetic Language and
from aMany-Windowed Tower, p. 63, and compare with the title ofWood,Merovingian King-
Episcopal Authority in Gregory ofTours' Lift of the Fathers," in The World ofGregory ofTours, doms.
ed. Kathleen Mitchell and Ian Wood (Leiden, 2002 ), pp. 283-94. 134. Ian Wood, "Deconstructing the Merovingian Family;' in The Construction of Commu-
130. For Caesarius's asceticism see, most conveniently, William Klingshirn, Caesarius of nities in the Early Middle Ages: Texts, Resources and Artifacts, ed. Richard Corradini, Max
Aries: The Making of a Christian Community in Late Antique Gaul (Cambridge, 1994); and Diesenberger, and Helmut Reimitz (Leiden, 2002), pp. 149-7!.
Leyser,Authority and Asceticism, chap. 4. I35 See White, "Clotl1ild's Revenge.''

128 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages The Poet and the Bishop { 129
practice of exile, and fostered a system of private penance. Columbanus's
trip to tl1e Continent was his version of exile, and for his newly founded
continental houses of Annegray, Luxeuil, Fontaines, and Bobbio he wrote
rules that included private penance. 3 What was most peculiar about these
monasteries in the Gallic context was their emplacement in the countryside
rather than in or near urban centers. This gave them a special role in royal
networks of power, one eventually institutionalized by "immunities:' which
recognized a monastery's privilege from interference by royal officials and
When in 613 Clothar II defeated the dowager queen of Austrasia, Brunhild, local bishops.4
and her remaining grandson- uniting the Merovingian kingdoms under Once in Gaul, Columbanus made himself well known at royal courts. In-
his aegis- he had the old woman tortured, paraded on the back of a camel, deed, when he first arrived he was welcomed by a king who begged him to
and kicked to pieces by a wild horse. 1 It was a graphic signal of regime stay: "Do not cross over to our neighbors, leaving the soil of our jurisdic-
change. With political displacement came a transformation in emotional tion?'5 Jonas, author of the Life ofColumbanus) had his reasons for pretend-
tenor. Gone were the effusive affirmations of family feeling, love, and ing that the king speaking these words was Sigibert I, but in fact that cannot
sweetness, so characteristic of the Austrasian court's emotional style. Gone, be right, since Columbanus arrived on the Continent fifteen years after Si-
indeed, was much of the old emotional vocabulary. There must have been gibert's death.6 Rather, the speaker must have been Sigibert's brotl1er Gun-
people who still used the old words in the same old way. But they remain tram or, possibly, Sigibert's son, Childebert II, who took over Austrasia and
below the historians' radar. What we see, rather, is a new-and reticent- Burgundy after Guntram's death in 593. 7 In any event, Columbanus did re-
emotional community connected to t11e Neustrian court. main, as tl1e king had begged him, and founded Annegray. Later he
founded Luxeuil with the support of Childebert II. 8 But after he refused to
MONKS, KINGS, AND COURTIERS bless the children of one of Childebert's sons, Theuderic II-they were
We must begin with Columbanus (d. 615 ), the fierce Irish monk who came brought out to him for that express purpose by their great-grandmother,
to the Continent circa 591. 2 This is because Columbanus's enmities became
the enmities of tl1e new regime, while his friends, followers, and disciples
3. For an overview, see Jane Barbara Stevenson, ''The Monastic Rules of Columbanus:' in
included most members of the royal court, including the kings and queens.
Columbanus, ed. Lapidge, pp. 203-16.
As we shall see, a rich cluster of texts was produced by the social community
4. Barbara H. Rosenwein, Negotiating Space: Power, Restraint, and Privileges ofImmunity in
connected to the courts of Clothar (d. 629 ), his son Dagobert I (d. 639 ), Early Medieval Europe (Ithaca, N.Y., 1999).
and tl1e latter's two sons, Sigibert Ill (d. ea. 656) and Clovis II (d. 657). Key s. Jonas, Vitae Columbani abbatis discipulorumque eius (hereafter Vita Columbani) 1.6, ed.
to this community's values-and even, to some extent, its emotional Bnmo Krusch, MGH SRM 4:72: "ne, nostrae ditionis solo relicta, ad vicinas pertranseas na-
norms-was the inspiration ofColumbanus. tiones?'
Much of Columbanus's youth was spent under the tutelage of Irish 6. The reasons have to do with Jonas's partisanship on behalf of Clothar 11, as Ian Wood

monks. Inspired by the Desert Fathers, Irish monasticism nevertheless had makes clear in "Jonas, the Merovingians, and Pope Honorius: Diplomata and the Vita Colum-
bani," in After Rome's Fall: Narrators and Sources ofEarly Medieval History: Essays fresented to
its own peculiarities. Like earlier ascetics, Irish monks put emphasis on
Waiter Goffart, ed. Alexander Callander Murray (Toronto, 1998), pp. m-12. On the structure
penance and prayer. But they also cultivated booklearning, elaborated the
and purposes of the Vita Columbani, see Clare Stancliffe, "Jonas's Lift ofColumbanus and his
Disciples," in Studies in Irish Hagiography: Saints and Scholars, ed. Maire Herbert, John Carey,
I. Fredegar, Chronicle 4:42, in The Fourth Book of the Chronicle ofFredegar with Its Continu- and P:ldraig 6 Riain (Dublin, 2001), pp. 189-220.
ations, ed. and trans. J. M. Wallace-Hadrill (London, 1960 ), p. 35. 7. See Wood, "Jonas, the Merovingians, and Pope Honorius:' pp. 105-6.
2. On Columbanus's life see Donald Bullough, "The Career of Columbanus:' in Colum- 8. For royal involvement in the foundation ofLuxeuil, see Wood, "Jonas, the Merovin-

banus: Studies on the Latin Writings, ed. Michael Lapidge (Woodbridge, 1997), pp. 1-28. gians, and Pope Honorius:' pp. 107-8.

Courtly Discipline { 131


Bmnhild-he was expelled, as Jonas put it, from that "jurisdiction.''9 From , But it would be wrong to see these as purely royal foundations; rather, they
then on, Bmnhild and Theuderic were vilified in the sources connected to were group projects, created by the kings and their courtiers. Who were
the Neustrian court and to Columbanus. these courtiers? Consider the brothers Rado, Ado, and Dado (the latter also
Before making his way to Italy to found the monastery ofBobbio in 613, known as Audoenus, the future St. Ouen). As boys, all three-unlike the
Columbanus visited Clothar II. This was just prior to the Neustrian Icing's reat-grandchildren of Brunhild-were blessed by Columbanus. They went
triumph over Bmnhild. Clothar immediately became Columbanus's parti- ~n to propagate Columbanian monasticism. Ado founded Jouarre, R~do
san. Jonas stressed the importance of the meeting: "When [the king] saw founded "Radolium:' and Dado founded Rebais.l 4 But they were also Im-
him, he received him as a gift from heaven, and, rejoicing, he begged portant men at court: Rado was treasurer under Dagobert and very likely
Columbanus to reside within the boundaries of his kingdom if he liked, and referendary (a sort ofproto-chancellor) under Clovis II.l 5 Dado was a man-
16
[the king said that] he himself, as he wished to do, would wait upon [the at-arms under Dagobert, later becoming the Icing's referendary. Thus

monk].'' 1 Columbanus refused to stay for long, but he did not depart be- ldngs and courtiers worked together to support Co~umbanu.s an~ his ~on
fore putting his stamp on the court: "Castigated by Columbanus on ac- asteries. They formed a tight network that we can dimly see m Witness hsts:
count of certain failings-in which hardly any royal court is lacking- Dado and Rado, for example, appeared together as signatories of the foun-
Clothar responded that he would emend everything in accordance with [the dation charter for Solignac, drawn up in the name ofEligiusP Eligius him-
monk's] command.'' 11 The court became a nursery for Columbanian sup- self served as goldsmith and minter for Clothar, diplomat for Dagobe:t, and
porters. Its restrained emotional character-the feelings and modes of ex- royal adviser at the court of Clovis II's wife, Balthild, even as he presided as
pression that it privileged and the many that it did not-contrasts with the bishop over the see ofNoyon.l 8 .
exuberance of Gregory of Tours and his associates. Eligius's career well illustrates the fact that although .many of the ~ourtlers
Clothar asked Columbanus to return to Francia, but the reformer was became bishops, they remained the Icing's men. 19 Episcopal appomtments
now committed to Bobbio. The king nevertheless became the protector of
27s (Burgundofaro's exemption, which mentions the king); and Rosenwein, Negotiati~g
Luxeuil, the most important of Columbanus's Gallic monasteriesJ2
Clothar's son and grandsons went on to support, among other Columban- Space, p. 69; for Stablo-Malmedy and Lagny, see Friedrich Prinz, Friihes Miinch~u~ tm
ian foundations, Solignac, Rebais, Stablo-Malmedy, Lagny, and NantJ3 Frankenreich: Kulture und Gesellschaft in Gallien, den Rheinlanden und Bayern am Betsptel der
monastischen Entwicklung (4. his 8. ]ahrhundert), 2d ed. (Munich, 1988), p. 149; for Nant see
Vita Amandi r. 23 , ed. Bmno Kmsch, MGH SRM s:44S For more on royal patronage of
9. Jonas, Vita Columhani r.2o, p. 9I. Columbanian monasticism, see Ian Wood, "The Vita Columhani and Merovingian Hagiog-
ro. Ibid., !.24, p. 98: "Quem cwn vidisset, velut caelestem munus recepit, ovansque pre- raphy:' Peritia 1 (1 982): 63-8o; idem, "Jonas, the Merovingians, and Pope Honorius"; Prinz,
catur, ut, si velit, intra sui regni terminos resedeat, seque ei, prout voluerit, famulatumm?' Friihes Miinchtum.
n. Ibid.: "castigatusque ab eo ob quibusdam erroribus, quos vix aula regia caret, spondit 14 . For Jouarre and Rebais, see Jonas, Vita Columhani r.26, p. roo; for "Radolium:' see
se Chlotharius iuxta eius imperium omnia emendatumm?' VitaAgili 6 [recte 4], AASS August VI, p. s82.
12. For Clothar's support ofLuxeuil, see Jonas, Vita Columhani r.3o, p. ro8, where Colum- rs. Horst Ebling, Prosopographie der Amtstriiger des Merowingerreiches von Chlothar II. (613)
banus asks the king "regali adminiculo ac presidio foveret" (to favor it with royal support and his KarlMartell (741) (Munich, 1974), pp. 201-2, no. 2s8.
protection), which the king fulfills: "Omni presidio supradictum monasterium munire !6. Richard A. Gerberding, The Rise of the Carolingians and the "Liher Historiae Francorum"
studet, annuis censibus ditat, terminos undique, prout voluntas venerabilis Eusthasii erat, (Oxford, 1987), p. Ss, and for Dado's social network, pp. 86-87.
auget omnique conatu ad auxilium inibi habitantium ob viri Dei amorem intendit?' (He was 17. For the charter, see note 13 above.
zealous to defend the monastery with every protection, endowed it with an annual tax, ex- 1s. See Hayo Vierck, "l?oeuvre de saint Eloi, orfevre, et son rayonnement:' in La ~eu~e.
panded its boundaries everywhere-as was the wish of the venerable [Abbot] Eustasius-and a
Les pays au nord de la Loire, de Dagohert Charles le Chauve (VII'-!X' siecle), ed. Patnck Perm
made every effort to help those living within on account of his love for the man of God.) and Laure-Charlotte Feffer (Rouen, I98S), pp. 403-9; Vita Eligii I.9, P 676; 232, P 717;
13. For Solignac, see Vita Eligii episcopi Noviomagensis I.IS, ed. Bnmo Kmsch, MGH SRM Wood, Merovingian Kingdoms, pp. rso-sr. .
4:680-81; its foundation charter is printed on pp. 746-49; for Rebais, see Diplomata, Char- 19 . For a list of the bishops who were originally courtiers at the Neustnan court, see Ca~lo
tae, Epistolae, Leges, ed. Jean Marie Pardessus, 2 vols. (1843; repr., Aalen, 1969), 2:39-41, no. Servatius, "'Per ordinationem principis ordinetur? Zum Modus der Bishofsernetmung nn

132 } Emotional Comm~nities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 133
were almost always made by royal fiat. Consider Desiderius, treasurer under there. In the late 63os, he joined Amandus in Maastricht, assisting him for
both Clothar and Dagobert. We have two charters from Dagobert ("re- three years.26 Shortly tl1ereafter, he published the Life ofColumbanus, which,
worked" but probably essentially authentic) appointing him bishop of Ca- among many other things, was a clearly partisan piece on behalf ofClothar's
hors and asking Sulpicius, the bishop of Bourges and former elemosinarius dynasty, particularly through its denigration of Brunhild and her progeny.
(royal alms-giver) of the palace, to perform his consecration.2o Another At the time that he wrote tl1e Life, Jonas was important at the royal court as
bishop, Amandus, may serve as a particularly striking example of royal and a supporter of Clovis's queen, Balthild. She was a well-known sponsor of
episcopal coordination. A man with missionary ambitions, he was "forced monastic reform in what by then was considered to be the Columbanian
[coactus] by the king"-in this case Clothar II-to become a bishop of no par- "tradition?'27 Very likely Jonas himself became abbot of Marchiennes, one
ticular see. 21 Determined to preach to the pagans living along the Scheldt of Amandus's monasteries. 28
River, he petitioned for-and received-letters from Dagobert demanding We thus may dimly perceive a community of courtiers, former courtiers,
that "if anyone did not willingly consent [sponte . .. voluisset] to be born and their hangers-on, lasting from about 614 to mid-century, witl1 tl1e bulk
again through the waters of baptism;' he was to be compelled (coactus) by the of their writings coming from the 63os and 64-os. They formed a group that
king to submit to it. 22 Amandus was so successful a missionary that the was evidently tightly bound by ties of affection but nevertheless wary of ef-
people of the region destroyed their sanctuaries "with their own hands?' In fusive emotional expression. The point may be illustrated by the letter col-
their place Amandus, supported by "the munificence of the king;' built mon- lection of Desiderius, whom we' have already met as royal treasurer and
asteries and churches. 23 Although he was subsequently exiled by Dagobert bishop ofCahors. 29
for upbraiding the king about the latter's "capital crimes;' he was soon for- A word, first, must be said about letters and letter collections. 30 The epis-
given and recalled to baptize and serve as godfather to Dagobert's son Sigib- tolary art had certain conventions-and much room for play. 31 A letter,
ert. When at first Amandus hesitated to tal<:e on this role, Dagobert had his
courtiers Eligius and Dado importune him. The mission of these, his co- 26. Jonas, Vita Columbani epist., p. 62.
courtiers, succeeded. 24 Later, when the bishopric of Maastricht came open, 27. Rosenwein, N rgotiating Space. In Jonas, Vita Johannis abbatis Rcomaensis, ed. Bruno Kr-
Amandus was yet again "forced [coactus] by the king'' to take the position. 25 usch, MGH SRM nos, the aud10r speaks of a lengthy trip he took in d1e area of Chalon "at
Jonas, the author of the Life of Columbanus and other important hagio- the order'' (exjusso) of prince Clod1ar III and his mother, Balthild.
graphical texts, was a member of this courtier-ecclesiastical group. Born in 2 8. On Jonas's career, see Adalbert de Vogtie's, introduction to Jonas de Bobbio, Vie de
Saint Colomban et de ses disciples, tra.ns. Adalbert de Vogiie (Begrolles-en-Mauges, !988),
Susa, he became a monk at Bobbio a few years after Columbanus's death
PP !9-2 3
29. Desiderius ofCal1ors, Epistulae, in Epistulae S. Desiderii Cadurcensis, ed. Dag Norberg, li
Edikt Chlothars II vom Jahre 614-;' Zeitschrift for Kirchengeschichte 8+ (1973): 1-29, with list Studia Latina Stockholmiensia 6 (Stockholm, 1961) (hereafter Desiderius, Bp.). On the single
on pp. 16-17. late eighth- or early ninth-cenn1ry manuscript in which we find this collection, see Ralph W.
20. The charters are MGH D Merov., ed. Theo Kolzer (Hannover, 2001), pt. 1, nos. 37, 38; Mathisen, "The Codex Sangallemis 190 and the Transmission of d1e Classical Tradition during
for Desiderius, see Ebling, Prosopographie, pp. 126-27, no. 14-2; for Sulpicius, see Vita Sulpicii Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages;' International Journal of the Classical Tradition 5
episcopi Biturigi, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 4-: 371-80. He was at Clothar's court in 620 (199 8): !63-94- See also his remarks on the manuscript in R.uricius ofLimoges and Friends: A
and, appointed bishop ofBourges in 624-, remained in that position until his death in 6+6/7 Collection ofLetters from Visigothic Gaul, tra.ns. Ralph W. Mathisen, Translated Text~ for Histo-
2!. VitaAmandi !.8, p. 4-34 On Amandus see Ian Wood, The Missionary Lift: Saints and the rians 30 (Liverpool, 1999 ), pp. 63-76. A few other letters, not copied into Sangallensis 190, are
Evangelisation ofEurope 400-IOSO (Harlow, 2001), pp. 38-4-2. contained in Vita Desiderii Cadurcae urbis episcopi, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM +: 569-71.
22. VitaAmandi I.I3, p. 4-37: "vir sanctus ... ad Aichariurn episcopum ... adiit eique hu- For help and bibliography I am grateful to Ralph Mathisen, who, with Danuta Shanzer, is
militer postulavit, ut si quis se non sponte per baptismi lavacnun regenerare voluisset, coac- preparing a translation of Desiderius's letters.
tus a rege sacro ablueretur baptismate. Quod ita factum est?' o. See Wood, "Letters and Letter-Collections" for a survey oflate antique collections and
3
23. Ibid., I.I5, p. 4-39 their significance.
24-. Ibid., I.I7, pp. 4-40-4-I. r. The rhetoricians tried to classifY the various types of letters but were not entirely suc-
3
25. Ibid., I.I8, P 4-4-2. cessful "because the letter-writing tradition was essentially independent of rhetoric?' See

134-} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 135
The Life ofDesiderius, written circa 8oo, reports that "many of tl1e bishops,
which was understood to be a kind of gift, began with an opening saluta-
dukes, and royal administrators [domestici] spent tl1eir time under his pro-
tion, often quite elaborate. 32 This was followed by the text, which might in-
tective wing; many of the nobles rejoiced to do him favors; and Queen
voke the importance of friendship; offer advice, condolence, or praise; malce
Nanthild loved him in particular?'36 Hyperbole, no doubt, and far more
a request or plea; take up apologetic or doctrinal matters; and/or show off
emotive than any ofDesiderius's letters. Nevertheless, it correctly describes
the writer's learning and wit, thus implicitly complementing the recipient
for catching the allusions. A farewell salutation brought the letter to a his dense network of contacts.
Desiderius's most enduring bonds were with Eligius, Dado, Sulpicius,
close. 33 Correspondence was seen as an inexhaustible resource and limitless
and Paulus. We have already met the first three. Paulus's curriculum vitae
mediator: "it is written by me;' ruminated Ruricius (d. 510 ), bishop of
was little different. He apparently spent time at the royal court before retir-
Limoges and avid letter writer, "and read by you, and yet even so it is not di-
ing to become a monk and then bishop ofVerdun circa 638.37 A letter writ-
vided, ... because it is handed on like the divine word and does not de-
ten by Desiderius to Dado, harking back to the comradery of this group,
part?'34 Letters were thought to give friends "a series of amiable fictions de-
raises most of the affective issues that shall concern us in the course of this
signed to preserve tl1e illusion of an actual union: a letter is a symbol of the
chapter: an emphasis on deference; the expression of painful longing, as-
voice, a conversation, an embrace, a bond of union. It is also a token of re-
suaged primarily by two emotions-love and joy-connected to religious
membrance, a consolation, a pledge of friendship?'35 The poetic letters of
feeling; the importance of fraternity ratl1er than mixed-sex bonds. It is use-
Fortunatus that we saw in the last chapter were but one variant of the genre.
Desiderius's prose letters were another. During his years as bishop, from ful to consider the letter in its entirety:
630 until 655, messengers crisscrossed the roads of Francia to bring his To Pope [as bishops were called in this period] Dado, holy and preferred
greetings and petitions to his many contacts (bishops, kings, mayors of the apostolic father, from Desiderius, servant of the servants of God
palace, a couple of monastics) and from his correspondents back to him.
While much time has slipped by without our being able to see you in
person, immense joy [gratulatio] has now presented itself to my mind
Stanley K. Stowers, Letter Writing in Greco-RnmanAntiquity (Philadelphia, 1986), p. 52. Topoi because in some measure, even after a long interval, the opportunity has
in letters included "reminders concerning the foundation of friendship in past shared experi- arisen of my appearing before your eyes by means of a letter. Therefore,
ences"; the "communication of affection and concern"; the assurance that "friends share in having humbly offered due obedience, I ask this more especially: that
each other's minds through letters when they are physically separated"; and words of"long-
you grant and ever deign to be the one whose person you once showed
ing to be with the loved one" (ibid., pp. 59-60 ). For further discussion of these and other
me with a unique love [unico amore] in that flower of primeval youth,
topoi, see Klaus Thraede, Grundziige griechisch-rb"mischer Brieftopik (Munich, 1970 ), esp. pt. 3
32. On letters as gifts, see M. Monica Wagner, "A Chapter in Byzantine Epistolography:
namely my Dado. Let the pristine love [caritas] between ourselves and
The Letters ofTheodoret of Cyrus;' Dumbarton Oaks Papers 4 (1948): n9-8r. The opening your-or rather our- [friend] Eligius remain unaltered, as indivisible as
greetings of many of the letters in collections extant today are often very plain and simple, our fraternity once was. Let us aid one another by mutual prayers so that
but this may well reflect the fact that their copyists did not have access to the actual, sent let- we may merit to live together in the celestial palace of the high King in
ter but rather to a file copy that abbreviated the salutation. SeeAvitus ofVienne, ed. and trans. the same way as we were associates in the hall of the earthly prince. And
Shanzer and Wood, pp. 56-57.
33 On the changes in letter form and content wrought by Christianity, see Michaela
Zelzer, "Der Brief in der Spatantike. Uberlegungen zu einem literarischen Genos am Beispiel
36. VitaDesiderii s, p. 566: "Multi quoque episcoporum, ducum hac domesticorum sub ala
der Briefsammlung des Sidonius Apollinaris;' Wiener Studien ro7-8 (1994-95): 541-51.
tuitionis eius degebant, multi nobilium sibi eum gratificare gaudebant; regina autem
34 Ruricius, Epistularum libri duo 2.5, ed. R. Demeulenaere, CCSL 64 (Turnhout, 1985),
p. 339; for a discussion of the implications of this letter, see Avitus of Vienne, ed. and trans. Nanthildis unice ipsum diligebat?'
37 Vita Pauli Episcopi Virdunensis, MSS Feb. II, pp. 175-78. See also Norberg's note in 1[
Shanzer and Wood, pp. 59-60. I'
,\:
35 Wagner, "A Chapter in Byzantine Epistolography;' 132-33. Desiderius, Bp., p. 32 !

Courtly Discipline { I37


136 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
although I have now lost two brothers from our college [Rusticus and "honorable" or "holy"; kings are "most glorious"; important court officials
Syagrius, Desiderius's blood brothers], we have in their place venerable are "illustrious" and "honorable"; and nearly everyone is a "lord:' often "my
Paulus and, no less praiseworthy in merits, Sulpicius. Therefore, who- everlasting" one (domino semper suo), while the writer often qualifies himself
ever among us is the more successful, let him strive all the more to climb a lowly sinner. 39 Here are some typical examples. "To the illustrious lord
the rungs of progress. Moreover, I might add that I am sure that I can at- and more especially to be honored by us [suspiciendo ], lord and son in
tain these things more by your prayers than by my own powers. It only Christ, Grimoald, mayor of the palace, from Desiderius, the sinner?'40 "To
needs you to deign to pray without ceasing, and I believe the piety of our the most glorious lord, crowned with the triumphal palm, son of the holy
Lord Jesus Christ will bestow what you request. Catholic church, King Sigibert, from your servant Desiderius, bishop of the
city of Cahors?'41 "To his everlasting lord Pope Medoaldus, from
Farewell, man of God, and remember me. 38 Desiderius, the sinner?'42 More telling, perhaps, are the salutations between
members of the close quintet of courtiers. We have already seen one greet-
ing to Dado. To Paulus, Desiderius wrote: "To his everlasting lord Bishop
DEFERENCE AND HIERARCHY Paulus, [from] Desiderius the sinner?'43 To Sulpicius: "To the holy patriarch
"To Pope Dado holy and preferred apostolic father, from Desiderius, ser- Sulpicius, from Desiderius, servant of the servants of God?'44
vant of the servants of God": this salutation is full of admiration and defer- To be sure, Desiderius's opening flourish to Bishop Sallustius of Agen
ence, accompanied by considerable self-abnegation, but it is not at all emo- calls its recipient "lovable"; but this is unique. And in fact even this saluta-
tional. There is affection in the body of the letter itself to be sure and we tion is rather less emotional than it might seem, since the word expressing
' '
shall return to that in a moment. Here, however, let us explore the ways in love is used in the gerundive form, which implies obligation: "to the most
which relationships were announced in salutations in the letters of this holy lord and the one to be beloved by me in Christ above all others?'45 As
group. There are thirty-seven letters in Desiderius's collection (seventeen
from Desiderius to various recipients, nineteen to Desiderius, and one be-
tween two bishops about Desiderius), all written between about 630 and 39. In thirteen out of fifteen letters (counting Desiderius, Bp. 2.8, pp. 56-57, among the let-
655. Their salutations are effusive about status, not feeling. Bishops are ters originating wid1 Desiderius, d10ugh it appears in the section of his correspondents, and
not counting either Bp. r.ro, pp. 28-29, which is missing its intitulo, or Bp. 1.15, p. 37, to
Abbess Aspasia) the status term clominus is used in the salutation. The two greetings that do
38. Desiderius, Bp. r.n, p. 30: "Sancto ac preferendo apostolico patre Dadone papae not use this term are to Dado (Bp. r.n, p. 30) and to Sulpicius (Bp. LI3, p. 33), members of rl1e
Desiderius setvus servorum dei. Dum plurima tempera elabuntur, quod praesentiam ves- quintet referred to above. In six out of seventeen letters, Desiderius calls himself"the sinner;'
tram videre nequimus, nunc inmensa se gratulatio menti objecit, dum aliquatenus, vel post while in twelve out of twenty letters written to Desiderius, the writer designates himself "the
diutina intervalla, sese opportunitas praehibuit, qua vel pagellari offitio me vestris con- sinner?' Contrast this latter point with the letters pertaining to Ruricius of Limoges, which
spectibus praesentarem. Igitur, debito obsequio humiliter exhibeto, illud peculiarius per- are contained in the same St. Gallen MS as Desiderius's letters (see note 29 above): in Ruri-
ore ut, quem quondam in ipso flore primevae juventutis unico mihi amore prebuisti, sem- cius's collection, the letter writer, while often expressing great deference toward the recipient,
per concedere digneris ilium meum Dadonem. Maneat pristina inter nos atque ilium never demeans his own status. See Ruricius, Epistularum, pp. 313-415, andRuricius ofLimoges
tuum, immo nostrum Elegium inconvulsa caritas, indisjuncta, ut fuit quondam, fraterni- and Friends.
tas. Mutuis nos jubemus praecibus, ut, quemadmodum in aula terreni principis socii 40. Desiderius, Bp. r.2, p. 12: "Domino inlustri et a nobis peculiarius suspiciendo, domino

fuimus, ita in illo superni regis caelesti palacio simul vivere mereamur. Et licet de nostro et in Christo filio Grimoaldo maiorem domus Desiderius peccator?'
collegio duos iam amiserim germanos, habemus pro his venerabilem Paulum nee minus 41. Ibid., 1.3, p. r_>: "Domino gloriosissimo, triumphali palma coronato, sanctae catholicae

praedicabilem meretis Sulpicium. Quisquis igitur nostrum quantum plus praevalet, tanto ecclesiae filio Sigeberto rege servus vester Desiderius Cadurcae urbis episcopus?'
amplius profectuum grados conscendere elaboret. Ad haec autem, predico, plus me vestris 42. Ibid., 1.7, p. 22: "Domino semper suo Medoaldo papae Desiderius peccator?'

orationibus quam meis viribus adtingere posse confido. Tantum est ut indesinenter vos 43 Ibid., r.r2, p. 31: "Domino semper suo Paulo episcopo Desiderius peccator?'

orare dignetis, et pietas Domini nostri Jesu Christi, credo, praestabit, quod rogatis. Vale, 44 Ibid., 1.13, p. 33: "Sancta patriarchae Sulpicio Desiderius servus servorum dei?'
vir Dei, et memento mei." 45. Ibid., r.r, p. 9: "Domino sanctissimo atque prae omnibus mihi in Christo diligendo?'

138} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 139
usual in medieval epistolary form, the opening flourishes ofDesiderius's let- greeting.''5 2 But Sidonius likely reduced and normalized his salutations
ters placed the recipient first, emphasizing hierarchy by showing when he edited his letters for publication. 53 Certainly Fortunatus's letters
deference. 46 Tellingly, in his letter to Abbess Aspasia, he put his own name were effusive, as we have seen. 54 The letters of Ruricius of Limoges were
first. The norms of male discourse, emotional and otherwise, did not (as we less demonstrative but nevertheless unafraid of emotion words: "To Abbot
shall see) fully apply to women. Pomerius, the lord of my soul, to be honored with all the inward parts of
In turn, those who wrote to Desiderius-even the Merovingian kings- love [dilectionis visceribus] in Christ the Lord, [from] Bishop Ruricius"; or,
invariably referred to him as "lord" and put his name first in their opening "To the holy and most blessed lord and pope, Bishop Sedatus, to be espe-
flourish. Sulpicius, whom Desiderius called- in the letter to Dado quoted cially honored by me, Bishop Ruricius, with particular worship and affec-
above-a "brother;' wrote in the greeting of one letter: "To his everlasting tion [affectu ].''55 Indeed, love also entered the salutations of the correspon-
lord and guardian of the apostolic seat, lord Desiderius, bishop of the city of dence of Desiderius- but only once, and tellingly it was in a letter from
Cal1ors, from Sulpicius, bishop of the city of Bourges;"47 In a second letter, Abbot Bertegiselus to "the treasurer Desiderius"-thus the young and not
Sulpicius's salutation was equally deferential: "To the lord always to be ad- yet episcopal Desiderius. He was called "illustrious lord and cherished by us
mired [suspiciendo] and to be spoken of venerably with every honor, Lord with the greatest love [summa dilectione colendo] and named with all rever-
Pope Desiderius, from Sulpicius the sinner."48 When Eligius, another mem- ence.''56 Bertegiselus presided over the monastery of St. Victor at Marseille,
ber of the "court fraternity;' wrote to Desiderius, he addressed him as "his whose norms-emotional and otherwise-may have been different from
enduring lord and apostolic father.'' 49 Paulus, yet another participant in the those prevailing at the Neustrian courtP
"indivisible" quintet, was still more terse: "To Pope Desiderius, ever our Like the opening flourishes, the texts of Desiderius's letters also empha-
lord, from Paulus, the sinner.''50 The Life ofColumbanus, written by Jonas sized status and hierarchy. Although the letters were about many disparate
circa 640, and thus in the midst of the flurry of Desiderius's letters, begins issues, one theme ran through many of them: the importance of"commen-
with a dedication to the abbots of Luxeuil and Bobbio that echoes the dry dation.'' A bit over one-third of the letters contain the word in its various
and status-conscious salutations of the letters we have been considering: forms. 58 As it appears in these materials, commendation is a kind of depen-
"To the fathers Waldebert and Bobolenus, distinguished lords, adorned by dency that must be requested (by the person who is commended, or on that
the authority of the sacred summit and sustained by the power of religion, person's behalf) of another, superior, person. Properties may be "corn-
from Jonas the sinner.''5l
But why not assume that unemotional salutations were the norm in late
antique letters? Sidonius Apollinaris, whose epitaph we saw in chapter 2 52. Sidonius, Letters 5.17, p. 226.
53. SeeAvitus ofVienne, trans. Shanzer and Wood, p. 62; Andre Loyen, SidoineApollinaire et
and who was noted as a letter writer both in his own day and our own,
!'esprit precieux en Gaule aux derniers fours de !'empire, Les Belles Lettres (Paris, 1943 ), pp. 124-
seems to bear this out. Here is a typical opening: "To his [suo] Eriphius,
25.
54. See chap. 4 above.
46. Heinrich Fichtenau, '~dressen von Urkunden und Briefen;' in Beitriige zur Mediiivis- 55 Ruricius, Bp. 1.17, p. 327: "Domno animae suae et totis in Christo domino dilectionis
tik: AusgewiihlteAufiiitze, vol. 3 (Stuttgart, 1986), pp. 149-66, esp. 153. visceribus excolendo Pomerio abbati Ruricius episcopus"; ibid., 2.18, p. 358: "Domino sancta
47. Desiderius, Bp. 2.1, p. 41: "Domno semper proprio atque apostolica sede colendo, ac beatissimo et mihi peculiari cultu affectuque specialiter excolendo papae Sedato .episcopo
domno Desiderio Cadurcae urbis pontifice Sulpicius Bitorige urbis episcopus?' Ruricius episcopus?'
48. Ibid., 2.ro, p. 58: "Domno semper suspiciendo et cum omni honore venerabiliter nom- 56. Desiderius, Bp. 2.2, p. 45: "Domino inlustri et a nobis summa clilectione colendo atque
inando, domno Desiderio papae Sulpicius peccator?' cum omni reverentia nominando?'
49. Ibid., 2.6, p. 52: "Domno semper suo atque apostolico patre?' 57. See Bruno Krusch's introductory remarks to the Vita Desiderii, p. 548.
50. Ibid., 2.12, p. 61: "Domno semper suo Desiderio papae Paulus peccator?' 58. Desiderius, Bp. r.2, p. 12; r.4, p. 17; r.6, p. zo; 1.7, p. 22; r.8, p. 24; r.9, p. 27; r.ro, p. 29;
51. Jonas, Vita Columbani, pre, p. 61: "Dominis eximiis et sacri culminis regimine deco- 2.7, p. 54; 2.8, p. 56; z.n, p. 6o; 2.14, p. 66; 2.18, p. 71. In firlly half of these the word appears
ratis religionisque copia fultis Waldeberto et Boboleno patribus Ionas peccator?' more than once.

140 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 141
mended" as well. Commendation is a gracious favor, to be granted by
[caritas] between ourselves and your-or rather our-[friend] Eligius re-
someone in the position to protect and help those commended. 59 Bishop
main unaltered, as indivisible as our fraternity once was. Let us aid one
Rauracius of Nevers, for example, began his letter to Desiderius by corn-
mending his messengers: another by mutual prayers so that we may merit to live together in the
celestial palace of the high King in the same way as we were associates in
With the most humble greeting, I commend to your Apostleship your the hall of the earthly prince.
servants Presbyter Mummolus and Garimundus, whom we have sent to
The love (amor) is unique and past, and even though Desiderius hopes it
your city and your small residence at Gregionnacus and at Albares to ex-
will never change, he in fact uses a different word, caritas) when he repeats
amine the register of serfs. We ask that you deign to receive those men I
it, no doubt to emphasize its religious character. He also transforms tl1e old
have commended and that tl1ey may merit to have your assistance in all
court relationship into a mutual prayer society that will persist in heaven.
matters when they have need of it.... At the same time we suggest with 'i
Let us consider more closely professions of affection-whether by the
respect to that small farm and the people residing there that you deign to
words a.ffectusja.ffectio) amor and its variants, caritas) or diligojdilectio-for,
regard them as under your protection, received [by youJ and corn-
taken together, tl1ey constitute the greatest part of the emotional vocabulary
mended as if they were your own dependents. 60
of tl1e correspondence, appearing thirty-two times.
No particular emotion is invoked as frequently as the nonemotional but In his letter to Bishop Sallustius of Agen, Desiderius speaks of the very
very honorable "commendation" and its variants, a word that comes up loving manner (satis amabiliter) in which the magnates and princes at court
twenty-two times in tl1e correspondence. But emotion words and emotional greeted him after his extended absence. 61 He and they once had a "ce-
expressions do appear, in measured and dignified manner, here as in other mented friendship" (conglutinata amicitia), he recalls, and "we to this day
writings from this group. hold them in the name of God so that mutual love [caritas mutua] may
never die but grow more and blossom as the days go by.''62 The term "ce-
LONGING, LOVE, JOY, AND ANXIETY mented friendship" has some classical echoes,63 but it also may have derived
In this emotional culture, male emotions were largely expressed in the con- from 1 Kings 18:1: "The soul ofJonatl1an was lmit with [conglutinata est] the
text of longing, particularly for the afterlife. Desiderius's letter to Dado soul ofDavid, and Jonathan loved [dilexit] him as his own soul.'' In all of
hoped for his correspondent's affection not directly but by remembering a these cases, both classical and biblical, the friendship was very much of this
past love and invoking its future in the life to come. To repeat the passage:
6!. Ibid., !.1, p. 9
I ask tl1is more especially: tl1at you grant and ever deign to be the one
62. Ibid.: "Omnes obtimates et principes, iuxta quod antea cum ipsos habebamus cong-
whose person you once showed me with a unique love [unico amore J in
lutinata amicitia,-gratias Christo qui est bonorum omnium dispensator-satis amabiliter
that flower of primeval youth, namely my Dado. Let the pristine love
nos reciperunt, et nos eos eatenus in Dei nomine retenemus, ut caritas mutua nunquam deci-
dat sed aucta magis in dies floriscat?'
63. Cicero, Laelius de amicitia 9.32, trans. William Armistead Falconer, Loeb Classical Li-
59. For a discussion of commendation during this period, which should not be confused
brary (Cambridge, Mass., 1964), p. 144: "si utilitas amicitias conglutinaret eadem commutata
with its "feudal" variant, see Mayke de Jong, In SamuePs Image: Child Oblation in the Early
Mediwal West (Leiden, 1996), pp. 198-204. dissolveret" (if expediency were what held together friendships, a change in this woqld break
them up). There is also Cicero, Epistulae adAtticum 7.8.1, in Cicero's Letters toAtticus, ed. D.
6o. Desiderius, Bp. 2.7, p.54: "Cum humillima salutationis officia commendo aposndami
R. Shackleton Bailey (Cambridge, 1968), 3:176-78: "m soles conglutinare amicitias testi-
vestro servellos vestros Mummolo presbytero et Garimundo, quos ad urbem vestram et ad
moniis mis" (you are accustomed to cement friendships by your testimonials). Isidore of
hospiciolum vestrum Gregionnaco sive Albares descriptionem manicipiorum inquirenda di-
Seville, Sententiarum libri tres 3.29.6, PL 83, col. 703: "et quos ante conglutinatos charitate
reximus. Suplicamus ut commendatos ipsos recipere dignetis, et, ubi ipsis necessitas extiterit,
habuerunt, postquam ad culmen honoris venerint, amicos habere despiciunt'' (and after
vestro auxilio in omnibus mereantur haber~ ... Simtdque suggerimus ut, de ipsa curtecella
achieving the pinnacle of honor, they despise having as their friends those whom they had
vel hominibus inibi consistentibus, sub vestra defensione tamquam propria familia dignetis
haberae receptos et commendatos?' previously held close out oflove) was written not much before the time ofDesiderius's letter.
I am grateful to Danuta Shanzer for these references.
142 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Courtly Discipline { 143
world. But in Desiderius's letter, it was part of a remembered past and a .. When Columbanus acceded, he departed amidst "the shrieks and grief of
longed-for future under the aegis of a benevolent and generous Christ. everyone;' the monks following him "as if it were a funeral?' 69 At Bobbio
In a letter to Grimoald, the mayor of the palace, Desiderius spoke of the under Columbanus's successor, Athala, love and fear (amor et timor) over-
unique affection (unicus affectus) that the mayor's father, Pippin, had had for whelmed the monks.7
him; he hoped that Grimoald would have the same "grace [gratiam J as your One sermon probably by Eligius has survived; it is full of affection and
father toward me."64 This is tepid. Nor were direct expressions of affection emotion. 71 Drawing on a topos of sermon writing, he called his listeners his
unusual in themselves, much stronger. To Sallustius, who had asked abou~ "dearest brothers" (fratres karissimi) and offered his advice in love (caritate).
Desiderius's reception at court, he wrote: "we thank you amply and with He asked them to listen to him, "so that I, with you, may merit to rejoice
the fullest affection [affectu] for your inquiry, which was made with so much [gaudere] in the company of the angels in perpetual peace?'72 His exhorta-
love [dilectionem ]."65 To Paulus, whom Desiderius had invited for the dedi- tions were full of emotion words: "For you have become Christians so that
cation of St. Amantius, the monastery he founded at Cahors, he urged: you may always do the works of a Christian, namely, love chastity [casti-
"Come, therefore, dearest [carissime ], with a speed equal to your distance;''66 tatem ametis], flee lust and drunkenness, adhere to humility, detest pride [su-
It was the first and last time Desiderius called anyone carissimus. perbiam detestemini] ... repudiate envy [invidiam respuatis], and have love
Love was, therefore, prized but also highly restrained, allowed vivid ex- [caritatem] for one another?'73
pression only when related to religious matters. In Jonas's Life of Colum- Fear, expressed ordinarily by the word timor or terror (though formido)
banus) "love of Columbanus" is invoked as the reason why a bishop of Be- metus) and pavor were also used), was always associated with religious feel-
sanc;on and his brother founded two monasteries under the saint's Rule. ing. It was a good emotion, rightly felt, expressed, and contemplated. To
Similarly, according to Jonas, King Clothar extended his protection over Abbess Aspasia, Desiderius wrote:
Luxeuil "on account of his love for the man of God;''67 Love, in the form of
Moved by your tears to this point, I have prepared for you the story from
caritas) also helped constitute the paradisaical early community that Colum-
the Gospel about the excellent woman [Mary Magdalene; see Luke 7:37-
banus and his followers established in Gaul. It was a community which, like
50 ]. You will certainly find in her divine consolation and fear [timorem ].
those of the Desert Fathers, cast out the vices-and emotions-of sloth
Consolation, because the pious benignity of the Lord does not reject the
discord, arrogance, elation, anger, and envy, substituting in their stead ~
soul that recovers from the burden of sin. Fear, because the soul that at-
total harmony of will and renunciation that was animated by patience, "the
tends to the service of God may ready itself bravely to withstand tempta-
emotion of love" (caritatis affectus), and mildness.6B Love of Columbanus
was much on display when he was expelled from his monastery by men sent
by Brunhild and Theuderic. The thugs themselves, impelled by fear (ur-
69. Ibid., r.20, p. 91.
guenti formidinae)- on the one hand for their lives, on the other hand for
70. Ibid., 2.4-, p. II7.
their souls-begged him with tears (cum lacrimis) to leave voluntarily so 7I. Auctor incertus [Eligius ], De rectitudine catholicae conversationis tractatus, PL 4-0, cols.
that they might be spared committing "a crime of such great wickedness?' n69-90 = PL 87, cols. 524--50. On its attribution to Eligius, see Clavis patristica pseude-
pigraphorum medii aevi, vol. r, Opera homiletica, pt. A, ed. John Machielsen (Turnhout, I990 ),
no. III3, p. 237. An abbreviated text is edited by Bmno Kmsch in MGH SRM 4-: 75I-6I. For
64-. Desiderius, Bp. r.6, pp. 20-21: "precor ut illam gratiam genetoris vestri erga me tenere the topos offratres carissimi see Thomas N. Hall, "The Early Medieval Sermon;' in The Sermon,
clignetis."
ed. Beverly Mayne Kienzle, Typologic des sources du Moyen Age occidental 8r-83 (Turn-
65. Ibid., r.r, p. 9: "satis et cum plenissimo affectu ... pro tantam inquisicionis vestrae hour, 2ooo ), pp. 206-7.
dilectionem gratias agimus?' 72. Eligius, De rectitudine, PL 4-0, col. n69: "ut vobiscum pariter merear in Angelomm
66. Ibid., I.I2, p. 32: "Veni igimr, carissime, quantum longius tantum velocius?' consortio perpetua pace gaudere?'
67. For the founding of monasteries, Jonas, Vita Columbani r.r4-, p. 79: "in amore beati 73 Ibid., col. n7o: "Nam ideo christiani facti estis, ut semper opera christiani faciatis, id
Columbani"; for Clothar, ibid., 1.29, p. ro8: "ob viri Dei amorem?' est, ut castitatem ametis, luxuriam et ebrietatem fugiatis, humilitatem teneatis, superbiam de-
68. Ibid., r.s, p. 71.
testemini ... invidian1 etian1 respuatis, charitatem invicem habeatis?'

I4-4- } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { I4-5
tions, a~ in the saying of Solomon: "Son, yield to the service of God; was endowed witl1 property "by princes themselves and other earlier kings
stand in fear [timore]; and prepare your soul for temptation" [Ecclus. and indeed God-fearing [timentebus] Christian people ... on account of
2.1.]74 their love [amorem J of God and the life eternal?'80 And again, near the end,
the Icing prohibits bishops from talcing any of the property given "by previ-
In the Life ofColumbanus, two girls are "noble in the world and given over
ous princes or our parents or by God-fearing [timentebus] people on ac-
to the fear [timore] of Christ?'75 This is good. Similarly, two sinful nuns find
count of their love [amore] of God?' 81 It stands to reason that Clovis would
no rest in death: lights and screaming voices hover over their graves, and
issue charters of this sort; we have at least one letter written by a bishop to
after six months their bodies have turned to cinders. The punishment lasts
him at the time of his accession to the throne, exhorting him to "fear God,
three years "so that the terror [terror] of the damned might give fright [tim-
and love Him?'8 2 The association of these two emotions was part of royal
orem] to the remaining sisters?'76 The father of Gibitrudis is struck with a
schooling. 83
fever when he opposes his daughter's religious vocation; the experience
Anxiety and other emotions of the troubled mind were also privileged in
leads him to a change of heart: "Now he yearned for the fear of the divine
these texts, but generally in measured doses. Desiderius and his correspon-
cult [ad timorem divini cultus aspirabat] after the example of his daughter?'77
dents rarely talked about painful things directly (though letters to and from
In the last example, timor is nearly the equivalent of amor; in many other
Felix of Limoges were, rather unusually, about hurts and apologies), but
instances the association of these two emotions is explicit. We have already
they were full of appreciation for consoling words. 84 "Because you have
met Athala, who "poured out" love and fear together. Leudeberta saw St.
deigned to console [consolare] us with pious solicitude by letter, our mind is
Peter ready to take her to heaven, and she reported on the experience so that
insufficient to offer the measure of thanks:' Desiderius wrote to King Sigi-
by her example "she could point to the great riches with which [the Creator
of things] does not cease to endow those who leave this light in fear and
love [timore vel amore] ofHim?' 78 Eligius exhorted believers to "fear [timete J So. ChLA 13, no. 558 = MGH D Merov, 1:218, no. 85: "ab ipsis principebus vel a citeris
Him over all things; adore [adorate] Him among all things; love [amate] priscis regebus vel aeciam a Deo timentebus christianis hominebus ipse sanctus locus in re bus
Him beyond all things?' 79 Even the legal writings of the court reflected the propter amorem Dei et vita aeterna videtur esse ditatus?'
Sr. Ibid.: "a priscis principebus seo genetorebus nostris vel a Deum timentebus hominebus
words' connectedness. An original charter of 654 issued by Clovis II to con-
propter amorem Dei?'
firm a privilege by Bishop Landeric of Paris for the monastery of Saint-
82. Epistolae aevi Merowingici colleetae, 15, ed. Wilhelm Gtmdlach in MGH, Epistolae 3:
Denis is full of references to timor and amor. Toward the middle of the text
Epistolae merowingici et karolini aevi (1892; repr., Berlin, 1994), 1:460: "Time Deum, ama
the terms are explicitly entwined as the charter observes that the holy shrine' ilium?' For discussion of this letter and further bibliography, see Yitzhak Hen, "The Chris-
tianisation of Kingship;' irr Der Dynastiewechsel von 7SI. Vm;geschichte, Legitimationsstrategien
und Erinnerung, ed. Matthias Becher and Jorg Jarnut (Miinster, 2004 ), pp. 163-77-
74 Desiderius, Bp. 1.15, p. 37: "Lacrimis tuis hactenus motus, hanc tibi historiam de evan- 83. The pairing was not automatic in Christian writings and appears to be particularly char-
gelio egregiae illius femine distinavi. In ipsam quippe divir1am consolationem repperies et acteristic of the emotional community of the Neustrian court. To be sure, the association of
timorem. Consolationem quidem, quoniam, qui de peccati onere resipiscet, hanc animam the words may be found ir1 Augustine, City ofGod 5-!4, CCSL 47, p. 147. But irr the Rule of St.
pia Domir1i benignitas non refutat. Timorem ideo, quia anima, quae accedit ad servitutem Ben edict, fear of God (timor Dei; formido) constitutes the first rung of the "ladder of humil-
Dei, continuo ad temptationes sustinendas se fortiter paret, dicente Salomone: 'FiJi, accedens ity;' while love of God (caritas Dei; amor), "which, when perfect casts out fear" (qtt:ae perfteta
ad servitutem Dei, sta in timore et prepara animam tuam ad temptationem?" foris mittit timorem ), is the prize after the final rung. See Regula Benedieti 7 in La regie de Saint
75 Jonas, Vita Columbani r.14, p. 8o. Benott, ed. Adalbert de Vogiie, SC 181 (Paris, 1972), pp. 474, 488-90. This ranking of the two
76. Ibid., 2.19, p. 140: "ut terror damnatorum timorem praeberet sodalium remanentium?' emotions is also found in Gregory the Great; see Italo Sciuto, "Le passioni e la tradizione
77 Ibid., 2.12, p. 132: "ex filiae exemplo iam ad timorem divini cultus aspirabat?' monastica;' Doctor Seraphicus: Bolletino d'informazioni del Centro di studi bonaventuriani 45
78. Ibid., 2.18, p. 138: "et tantis munerum copiis superis demonstraret qui bus [rerum sator] (1998): 14.
ab hac luce in suo timore vel amore migrantes ditare non desinit?' 84. For letters to and from Felix, see Desiderius, Bp. u6, p. 39; 2.21, pp. 75-76. On Chris-
79. Eligius, De reetitudine, PL 40, col. II73: "Ilium ergo, fratres, super omnia timete, ilium tian consolation literature see Peter von Moos, Consolatio. Studien zur mittellateinischen
inter omnia adorate, ilium ultra omnia amate?' Trostliteratur uber den Tod und zum Problem der christlichen Trauer, 4 vols. (Munich, 1971-72).

146 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 147
85
bert. "I ask that the person whom you have thus consoled [consolasti] with
Athala exuded love and fear, nevertheless at his monastery "no one was
benefits you may now aid with the benefit of prayer:' he wrote to Bishop
86 worn down by grief [merore] nor uplifted by too much happiness [letitia ].''93
Medoaldus. And in the same letter, "let us merit to be consoled [consolari]
Love itself might need tamping down, as it did for Gregory the Great. Thus
by regular replies about your health and that of the lord king and your
the wily devil tried to snare Columbanus "by arousing in him love [amores]
brethren and sons.''87 These were polite anxieties. More telling were those
for lascivious girls.''94 It was only bad people who "raged" (juror and its vari-
expressed by J onas, especially in his Life of]ohn ofRloml, written perhaps in
ants); good ones never did. Indeed, there was something almost inhuman
66o, where we can see emotional restraint take hold by degrees.88 Jonas's
about such passion, for the demons themselves tormented their victims
John was an anxious young man. At twenty, the "anxious vow of his heart"
"with savage fury" (horrido furore). 95 Brunhild, "raging" ifurens) after
(anxia cordis vota) was to build an oratory, but he changed his mind, "aflame
Columbanus refused to bless her great-grandchildren, "ordered the little
with ardor of mind and desire for heaven:' and sought out instead the
ones to go. The man of God was leaving the royal court, and when he
"wilderness" ofBurgundy.89 However, after building a monastery there, he
leaped across the threshold, a noise arose that shook the whole house and
was prodded by the "anxious goad of his heart" (anxio cordis stimulo) to ag-
inspired terror in all, yet did not restrain tl1e fury [fUrorem] of that wretched
onize about whether he ought to preside over monks or obey an abbot him-
woman.''96 Brunhild, as we know, was the bugaboo of the Neustrian dy-
sel90 Arriving at the exemplary monastery ofUrins to learn true discipline,
nasty. In another instance, when an oarsman struck one of the monks who
he was soon recalled to Burgundy by the bishop of Langres. His anxious
chose to leave Gaul with Columbanus, the saint upbraided him: "Why,
heart stinging him once again, he weighed what he should do, eventually
cruel one, do you add grief to grief? ... Know that you will be sttuck by di-
deciding to return. 91 Yet as he took charge of his monastery, his anxieties di-
vine punishment in that place in which, raging [fitrens ], you struck a mem-
minished, and, on his deathbed, he admonished his brethren "with smiling
face and joyful mien.''92 ber of Christ.''97 And this is indeed what happened.
Most emotions in these materials were either weal( or rejected. If Abbot
OVERWROUGHT MOTHERS
Mothers often partook of these excesses and shared in their opprobrium.
85. Desiderius, Bp. 1.4, p. r6: "Quod nos pia sollicitudine litteris dignati estis consolare, in-
sufficiens est mens nostra gratiarum iura persolvere?'
They were expected to be emotionally overwrought yet condemned for it. 98
86. Ibid., 1.7, p. 22: "supplico ut quem tunc beneficiis consolasti, nunc orationis beneficia
Bnmhild was the archetype of such a mother, and hatred for her may well
iubes?'
87. Ibid.: "de vestra et domni regis vel fratrum ac filiorum vestrorum mereamur incolomi-
tate rescripti seriae consolari?' Thoughts on the End of the Holy Man" (unpublished). I am grateful to Dr. Diem for send-
ing me a draft of his paper.
88. For the date, Jonas, Vita ]ohannis, p. sos, where the author speaks of conceiving the
project in the third year of the reign ofClothar III, i.e., 66o. 93. Jonas, Vita Columbani 2.4, p. rr7: "nullus iuxta eum vel merore terebatur neque nimia
letitia extollebatur?'
89. Ibid., 2, p. 507: "intrepidus mentisque ardore et celesti desiderio accensus?' Anxiety is a
94. Ibid., 1.3, p. 68: "lascivarum puellarum in eum suscitare amores?'
key emotion in this piece, appearing (in one form or another: anxietas, anxio corde, anxius)
95 Ibid., I.2I, p. 94
four times in the approximately 315 lines of its published edition (see citations here and
below). This is, admittedly, only once every 79lines or so, but compare it, for example, to the 96. Ibid., r.r9, p. 87: "Ilia furens parvolus abire iubet. Egrediens vir Dei regiam aulam,
dum limitem transiliret, fragor exorta totam domum quatiens omnibus terrorem inc~ssit nee
four uses of an anxiety word in the first book ofJonas, Vita Columbani: (r.4, p. 71; 1.7, p. 73;
r.r3, p. 78; r.r9, p. 89; r.2o, p. 9r): once every 2791ines. tamen misere feminae furorem conpescuit?'
90. Jonas, Vita]ohannis 3, p.so8. 97. Ibid., r.2r, p. 93: '"Quur; inquid 'crudelis, addis merori merorem? ... Memento te a
9r. Ibid., 4, p. 509. divina u!tione in hoc loco percussurum, in quo Christi membrum fhrens percussisti?"
92. Ibid., r8, p. srs: "vultu hilaris et letus facie monebat?' It is one of the younger monks 98. Already Augustine had spoken of his always-weeping mother, but he also rather ad-
mired her excessive tears see for example, Confessions 3.12, r:63, where her weeping and beg-
who considers matters "anxio cordis animo" (with anxious spirit of heart) in ibid., r6, p. 514.
Albrecht Diem points out that John becomes the model "of the responsibly-acting, non-
ging on behalf of her sm~ lea~s t~
a bishop say dryly: ''Vade a me; ita vivas, fieri non potest,
ascetic monastic manager"; Diem, "Monks and Kings in the Early Middle Ages: Some ut filius istarum lacrimarum pereat?' (Leave me be: with you living this way, it's not possible
that the son of those tears should perish.)
I48 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Courtly Discipline { 149
have helped pave the way for the jaundiced view of mothers in general. It is The mother ofJonas's John ofReome was also importunate-and sum-
also likely that Clothar II, whose father was arguably not Chilperic but marily rejected. She wanted to see her "long-desired" child upon his return
rather his mother's lover, found it politically important to downgrade from Urins, but
mothers altogether as he took up the royal mantle of his putative father.99
hearing this, he declined and excused himself from giving in to the emo-
Even the mothers of saints were understood to be importuning, their de-
tion [affectum] of his motl1er, recalling that "He who does not leave' his
mands dangerous. The best remedy was escape. We have already seen how
father and mother is not wortl1y of me" [Matt 10:37]. Nevertheless, lest
Columbanus "leaped over" (transileret) Brunhild's threshold (limitem) with
he injure by rash condemnation the faith of the mother, which, he knew,
great noise. He was here, in Jonas's account, reprising an earlier scene with
was imbued with tl1e love and fear of Christ [in Christi amorem et timo-
his own mother. When he announced to her that he was leaving home, her
grief, like Brunhild's fury, knew no bounds: rem ], he walked past her [transsiens ante aeam ], appearing for a moment
to her eyes so tl1at he might satisfY tl1e desire of his motl1er yet not
His mother, struck witl1 sorrow [do lore], begs him not to leave her. But he weaken the vigor of his religion on account of tl1e flatteries [blandi-
replies, "Haven't you heard: 'He who loves his father and motl1er more menta] of his mother. 102
than me is not worthy of me'?" [Matt. 10:37] He begs his mother, who is
Had Jonas wished to emphasize the patl1os of the moment and tl1e tender
standing in his way and clinging to the threshold of the door, to let him go.
She, wailing and prostrate on the pavement, denies she will permit it. He feelings of tl1e son, he certainly had a number of possible models to choose
leaps over [transilit] botl1 the threshold [limitem] <)lld his mother and tells from. When Augustine determined to leave Carthage, his mother was so
his mother to be happy [se laetam habeat]: she will never see him again in upset tl1at she followed him down to the coast. He had to lie to get away from
tlus life, but he will go wherever the path of salvation shows the way.1oo her. But Augustine was not proud of himself: "You have mercifully forgiven
me even this?'I03 In the Life of Fulgentius of&spe) the saint's mother was ex-
The image of a parent restraining a child at the "threshold" may have come ceptionally demanding, full of fury ifuribundus) as she asked that her son re-
from Jerome, who admonished Heliodorus (in a well-known letter) to re- turn to her and leave the monastery. Her demands were rejected, but her son
ject all family attachments in order to pursue the ascetic life: "although your suffered deeply, for he "had always loved [semper amaverat] his mother?' 104 In
father should lie on the threshold [limine], keep going by treading on your the Life ofSimeon Stylites) the hero's mother weeps, shakes out her hair, and be-
fatl1er." 101 If this is the source, it is telling that the Neustrian courtiers rates her son when she is not allowed to see him at his monastery.
turned the father into a mother.
"Son, why have you done this? For the womb in which I bore you,
you have overwhelmed me with mourning [luctu]; for the milk with
99 On Clothar's parentage, see Wood, "Deconstructing the Merovingian Family;' pp. 163- which I suclded you, you have given me tears [lacrymas]; for the kisses
64.
with which I kissed you, you have given me bitter heart pangs; for the
roo. Jonas, Vita Columbani 3, p. 69: "Materque eius dolore stimulata, precatur, ut se non
sorrow and labor that I suffered you have inflicted on me the cruelest
relinquat. At ille: 'Non; inquid 'audisti: "Qui amat patrem aut matrem plus quam me, non
est me dignus"?' Obstanti matri et limitem ostii inherenti postulat, ut se ire sinat. Ilia eiulans
et pavimento prostrata, denegat se permissuram; ille limitem matremque transilit poscitque ro2. Jonas, Vita Johannis 6, p. 509: "Hoc ille auditu abnuit, matrisque affecnun ut faverit,
matri, se laetam habeat: ilium numquam deinceps in hac vita visurum, sed, quocumque recusavit, reminiscens illud: 'Qui non reliquerit [note, not amat] patrem aut matrem, non est
salutis via iter pandat, se progressurum?' me dignus? Sed tamen, ne fidem matris, quam in Christi amorem et timorem inditam
ror. Jerome, Epistola XIV ad Heliodorum 2, PL 22, col. 348. Cohunbanus himself knew and noverat, temere contemnendo violaret, transsiens ante aeam, parumper obtutibus eius ap-
quoted from this letter by Jerome: see Neil Wright, "Columbanus's Epistulae/' in Colum- paruit, ut et desiderium matris saciaret et vigorem relegionis ob matris blandimenta non
banus: Studies on the Latin Writings, ed. Lapidge, p. 73. For more on the topos of the saint molliret?'
leaving his or her family against its wishes, see Lutz E. von Padberg, Heilige und Familie. Stu- ro3. Augustine, Confessions s.8.rs, r:ro4: "Et hoc dimisisti mihi misericorditer?'
dien zur Bedeutung familiengebundener Aspekte in den Viten des Venvandten- and Schiilerkreises ro4. Ferrandus, Vita beati Fulgentii pontiftcis 4 in Vie de Saint Fulgence de Ruspe, ed. and
um Willibrord, Bonifatius, und Liudger, 2d ed. (Mainz, 1997), pp. 86-9r. trans., P. G.-G. Lapeyre (Paris, 1929), pp. 25-27.

rso } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { rsr
blows.'' And she said such things as to make us all weep ifaceret was not denied. Mter the daughter died-joyfully (ovans)-she obtained
flerepos the favor of her motl1er's death in turn. 109
It is true that Christian values at every period put a premium on death
No monk wept in Jonas's accounts. Rather he made his own the flat af-
(and the afterlife), downgrading this world and its fleshy feelings. But
fect that we see, for example, in the Latin Life of St. Pachomius.l06 Here a
different actors variously interpreted this script. Here we see emphasized
~other seeks out her son in a monastery, bringing with her episcopal writ-
the pettiness of particular feelings, the exaggeration of mother love, so that
mgs to prove that her son should be returned home, and asking to see him.
it seems out of proportion to the measured emotions of those virtuous be-
Pachomius tells the boy to leave, but the young man insists that he left his
ings-male virgins-around them. 110 This is worlds away from Gregory of
mother along with the world and cannot put her ahead of divine love. Like
Jonas's Columbanus, he quotes Matthew 10:37.107 Tours.
The only mother who showed restraint (in tl1e ways that her feelings
. Perhaps Jonas was influenced by Cassian, who warned that the tempta-
were depicted in a text, in any event) was Jonas's own, and that only after
tiOns of "the feminine sex" originated in recalling, in seeming innocence, a
she learned a lesson about being too importunate. She had begged Jonas's
mother or a sister.l 08 But Jonas's deprecation of mother love was not just
abbot, Athala, to be allowed to see her son. Eventually, permission was
connected to fear of lust. Consider Jonas's story of Deurechild and her
granted, and Jonas set out with two companions. His mother's joy was
mother. The two entered a monastery together, but the daughter was more
short-lived and quickly suppressed for a higher good:
virtuous than her mother and was assured of eternal life. As Deurechild lay
on her deathbed, her anxious (anxia) mother "amidst sobs and sighs begged When we arrived there, I was received graciously [gratuite] by my
her daughter that, should she have strength enough, she, Deurechild, mother after the passage of so many years, but not for long did my
should p.ray to be restored to the land of the living, or, should she actually mother enjoy [fruitur] the wished-for gift. For that same night I was
be reachmg her life's finish, she quickly take her mother from this world struck by a fever and began to cry out amidst the burning heat that I
after her, for, said she, it was impossible for her to live after her daughter's was being tortured by the prayers of the man of God [Athala] not to re-
departure.'' This sort of affection was belittled by the daughter, who attrib- main there even a little while against his prohibition.l 11 If [my com-
uted it to "carnal desires" (carnalibus . .. desideriis). And yet its importance panions] did not move me right away and if I did not return to the
monastery with whatever strength I could muster, I would soon be
!05. Antonius, Vita sancti Simeonis stylitae 9, PL 73, col. 329: "FiJi, quare hoc fecisti? pro overtaken by death. To this my mother said, "It is better for me, son, to
utero quo te portavi, satiasti me luctu; pro lactatione qua te lactavi, dedisti mihi Jacrymas; know you are healthy there than to weep [dejlere] for you dead here.'' 112
pro osculo quo te osculata sum, dedisti mihi amaras cordis angustias; pro dolore et Jabore
quem passa sum, imposuisti mihi saevissimas plagas. Et tantum locuta est, ut nos omnes fac- ro9. Jonas, Vita Columbani 2.15, p. 135: "Videns anxia genetrix incumbentem unicae prolis
eret flere?' exitum, inter singultus ac gemitus ftliam poscit, ut si valeat impetrare, superis reddatur; aut si
ro6. Denis the Little, Vita Sancti Pachomii 29-31, in La vie latine de saint Pachome traduite du suae vitae metam suppleat, se cito de hac vita post se ducturam, nee posse se post eius vivere
grec par Denys le Peti~ ed. H. van Cranenburgh (Bmssels, 1969 ), 152-60. exitum?'
!07. Ibid., 3I, p. 158: "parentes non debeo divinae praeponere caritati?' The lack of affect is no. For Christian traditions that downgraded mothers, though not especially for their
~ere all the m.ore striking given that the rest of the episode with Theodore is full of expres- emotionalism, see Clarissa W. Atkinson, The Oldest Vocation: Christian Motherhood in the
Sions of emotiOn: when he had his conversion to the ascetic life, his mother found him with Middle Ages (Ithaca, N.Y., 1991), esp. chaps. r, 3
his eyes "full of tears" ("invenit oculos eius plenos lacrimis") (ibid., 29, p. IS2); when he de- m. Jonas had indeed obtained permission from his abbot, but in the meanwhile Athala
clared himself ready to follow Pachomius, he was "overcome by tears [lacrimis vincebatur] found himself on his deathbed. Hence the new "prohibition": the abbot now wanted Jonas's
and utterly inebriated by divine love [amore divino Jortiter sauciatus]" (ibid., 30 , p. 15 6); when return.
he saw Pachomius for the first time, he wept for joy (ibid.); and Pachomius soon came to n2. Jonas, Vita Columbani 2.5, p. n8: "Ubi ut pervenimus, gratuite a genetrice post tanto-
love him ("satis eum dilexit et in corde suo conservit'') (ibid., 31, p. 15 8). rum intervallo annomm susceptus, sed non diu genetrix optatum fmitur donum. Nam
ro8. John Cassian, Institutes 6.13 in Jean Cassian, Institutions cenobitiques, ed. and trans. eadem nocte febre correptus inter incendia clamare coepi, me Dei precibus viri torqueri, ne
Jean-Claude Guy, SC ro9 (Paris, 1965), p. 276. inibi contra interdictum quantisper morarer; si non me cito submoveant, quocumque po-

152 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 153
One mother has actually left us some writings: Herchenefreda th nounced them, as Eligius did his, as a sort of"preacher:' she perhaps evaded
mother of Desiderius. A few of her letters have been preserved not i~ h e the opprobrium of an overwrought mother.
' 1 . . ' er
son s etter collectiOn but m the Carolingian Life ofDesiderius. ll3 If their au _ Thus, in a letter announcing the murder of her son Rusticus, she embed-
then~city may be g~anted (and nothing suggests the contrary), she was un- ded her emotional turmoil within sermonizing admonitions:
ambiguously affectiOnate: "To my sweetest [dulcissimo] and most beloved
[am;antissimo] son Desiderius, from Herchenefreda"; or, playing on her I, unhappy [infe!ix] mother, what should I do, now that your brothers
s~n s name, ''!ot_TIY sweetest [dulcissimo] and most desirable [desiderantis- are here no longer? If you should die, I would be bereft, childless. But
you, my most pious pignus) my sweetest one [dulcissime ], constantly take
stmo] .son Destdenus, from Herchenefreda"; and again, contrasting her own
emotiOnal state to ~a~ of her son's, ~'To my always desirable [desiderabi!i] care that, though you have lost the solace [solatia] of your brothers, you
and sweetest [dulctsstmo] son Destderius, from Herchenefreda, your do not lose yourself and, God forbid, go to your destruction. Beware al-
wretched [miseraJ mother.''ll4 ways the wide and spacious road, which leads to perdition, and keep
With such effusiveness, how did she retain her dignity in the world her yourself in the path of God. As for me, grief on this great a scale (prae
son moved in? Perhaps she did not; after all, her letters were not saved in nimio do/ore) is, I suspect, taking my life away. What you can do is pray
Desiderius's letter collection, and we have no evidence that he sent letters to that He in whose love I sigh day and night [in cuius amore die noctuque
~er. Nevertheless, her letters have survived, presumably in Desiderius's keep- suspiro] will receive [my]soul as it departs [this life].l 17
mg. I suggest that she carefully crafted her letters to follow the genre of the
sermon, where (as we have seen in the case ofEligius) emotions were wel- THE EMOTIONAL WORLD OF COLUMBANUS
comed. m Like Dhuoda, whose Handbook for her son wallced a fine line be- Whence an emotional community so wary of words of passion that they
tween pathos and pomposity, Herchenefreda advised her son on how to live fit mainly in sermons and longing for another world? We might argue, in
at court: "I admonish you, my sweetest [du!cissimum J child fpignus: literally, the tradition ofElias, that a court culture-even one in the seventh cen-
a pledge of love], that you assiduously think of God, have God constantly tury-worked to restrain impulses. But, as the social constructionist the-
on your mind, not consent to or act upon the bad works that God hates ory has taught us, passionate emotional expressions are also products of
[odit]; be faithful [sis fide/is] to the Icing; love [di!igas] your fellow courtiers social constraints. And, indeed, we saw a very different set of emotional
[~ontuberna!es]; always love [ames] and fear [timeas J God.''ll6 Her instruc- norms at the Austrasian court of Brunhild and Sigibert in an earlier gen-
tiOns thus consisted in a string of emotional stances. But because she pro- eration. Restraint is not a useful term, then, to explain or compass the
emotional tenor at N eustria in the first half of the seventh century. Emo-
tional shaping needs more than "tamping down.'' It needs norms, codes,
tuissem conamine ad monasterium repedare, me cito morte preventum. Mater ad haeC'
'Melius mihi esse, fili, te inibi sanum scire, quam hie mortuum deflere.'" . models, articulated value-systems (such as aphorisms), and inarticulate
II3. Vita. Desiderii 9-II, pp. 569-70. The vita dates from ea. 8oo (see Krusch's remarks on ones (such as those implied by loving a charismatic leader). We have seen
P 556), but the letters were presumably copied from authentic exemplars that the author had what the results of these were at the Neustrian court; but what explains
acce.ss t~, perhaps in the archives of Saint-Gery (originally St. Amantius ), the monastery that them?
Desrdenus founded at Cahors (ibid., p. 550; Desiderius, Bp., 1. 2 , p. 12). They came, to be sure, from the ascetic impulse. The models and writ-
II4. VitaDesiderii 9, p.569; ro, p.569; n, p. 570.
n5. I thank J.ulia S~ith for discussions on this point. To be sure, St. Paul had already
turned paraenms, that rs, exhortation, into an epistolary mode. The point here is that this n7. Ibid., n, p.570: "Ego infelix mater quid agam, cum fratres tui iam non sunt? Si tu
~ode appears to have been, for Desiderius and friends, the only acceptable vehicle for emo- discesseris; ego orbata absque liberis ero. Sed tu, piissime pignus, mihi dulcissime, sic te
tion talk.
jugiter praecave, ut dum solatia fratrum perdidisti, te non perdas, ut ne, quod absit, in inter-
r~6. Vita Desiderii 9, P 569: "Te vero, dulcissimum mihi pignus, moneo, ut assidue Deum itum vadas. Cave semper latam et spatiosam viam, quae ducit ad perditionem, et temet ipsum
cogrtes, Deum jugiter in mente habeas, mala opera quae Deus odit nee consentias nee facias in via Dei custodi. Ego prae nimio dolore vitam meam amittere suspicor. Tu ora, ut egredi-
regi sis fidelis, contubernales diligas, Deum semper ames et timeas.'' '
entem animam ille suscipiat, in cuius amore die noctuque suspiro.''
I 54 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 155
ings of the Desert Fathers remained influential in seventh-century Gaul. their own imaginations to guide them. To be sure, Columbanus left ser-
Nor should we forget that a narrowing of the educational program-with mons, poems, rules, and letters to posterity. There is little evidence, how-
classical literature largely falling by the wayside and the Psalter becoming ever, that the courtiers of N eustria read them. Jonas dearly knew the rules
the essential primer-was accompanied by an impoverishment of emotional and penitentials of Columbanus, but he may have relied on oral traditions
vocabulary. us Education has much to do with values, which, in turn, deter- and his own lived experience at Bobbio for his knowledge. In his Life of
mine the emotions that are privileged or downgraded. ColumbanusJ he mentions some of Columbanus's writings, but he himself
To some degree, the change must have sprung as well from Clothar's ha- borrows only five short phrases directly from the extant writings of Colum-
tred ofBrunhild and her brood; he set himself against their culture and their banus.l22 In addition, the goals of the fiery reformer, a "holy man" of the
modes of expression. If the values of the old regime privileged passion, then old school, were quite different from the goals of the Neustrian court,
the new regime would favor the opposite. Already the earliest public pro- which included institutionalizing Columbanian ideals in monasteries that
nouncements of the new dynasty set the tone. The Edict of Paris, promul- would work for them as holy sites without any saintly presence at all. 123 It
gated in 614, suppressed Brunhild's entire line by the simple expedient of should thus not be surprising that the Neustrian emotional world was
naming only Guntram, Chilperic I, and Sigibert I as Clothar's predeces- different from Columbanus's. Yet we will also find many commonalities.
sors.l19 At about the same time, the Council of Paris set forth a series of While Columbanus's affective palette was large, he used only five emo~
rules delimiting the prerogatives of bishops, including their right to act on tion words (and their grammatical variants) thirty or more times in his
certain emotions: "If a bishop, either out of anger [iracundia] or for money works: amor (love), caritas (love), diligo (love), laetitia (joy), and timor
ejects an abbot from his position uncanonically, let the abbot have recourse (fear).l24 Love (via three different words), joy, and fear: these were the chief
to a synod?' 120 It was perfectly proper for a bishop to remove an unjust
abbot, but here the assembly recognized anger and greed- both sins, both
r22. Bruno Krusch identifies ten echoes of the writings of Columbanus in Jonas, Vita
also emotions-as illegitimate motives.
r Columbani. Of these, only five directly use words from Columbanus's texts.
.i' The Neustrian court also had the example and the exhortations of ri3. Diem, "Monks and Kings;' argues for tl1e institutionalization of charisma in the mon-
!' Columbanus to guide it. We have seen that he spent some time with astery; on the monastic space itself taking on sacred status, apart from any saint within, see
Clothar as both a "gift from heaven" and a "castigator?' What emotional Rosenwein, Negotiating Space.
I'' norms and expectations did he bring? We shall soon see. But we must not r24. The frequency of the most used emotion words in Columbanus, Opera, ed. and trans.
expect Columbanus's sensibilities to have been followed slavishly by the G. S. M. Walker (Dublin, 1957), are as follows: amor: 6o; caritas: 33; diligo: 63; laetitia: 38;
"next generation:' the one represented by Desiderius and Jonas,l2l Few of timor: 3r. (Verbal, noun, and adjectival forms of all these words are included in the count.)
These numbers were calculated by using the Patrologia Latina Database published by Pro-
them had known the reformer; they had mainly the memories of others and
Quest Information and Learning Company, taking care to eliminate all writings considered
spurious or doubtful by Walker. Walker's assessment of Columbanus's writings has recently
u8. See Pierre Riche, Education and Culture in the Barbarian West Sixth through Eighth been largely affirm~d by the discussions in Columbanus: Studies on the Latin Writings. It is
Centuries, trans. John]. Contreni (Columbia, S.C., I976), esp. pt. 3. likely, however, that the metrical poems titled in Walker ''Ad Hunaldum;' ''Ad Sethum;' and
II9. Edict of Paris 9, MGH Capitularia Regum Francorum, r, ed. Alfred Boretius (Han- ''Ad Fidolium" were not by Columbanus (see Michael Lapidge, "Epilogue: Did Columbanus
nover, r883), p. 22.
Compose Metrical Verse?" in Columbanus: Studies on the Latin Writings, ed. Lapidge,
r2o. Council of Paris (614), 4, in Concilia Galliae a. SII-a. 695, ed. Charles de Clercq, CCSL pp. 274-85); and thus I have eliminated them from the word count here. On the otl1er h~d,
I48A (Turnhout, 1963), p.276.
I have included the short "Oratio S. Columbani" in Columbanus, Opera, p. 214, whtch
r2r. T. M. Charles-Edwards makes the point with regard to the importance of penance: Walker considered of dubious autl10rship but which Lapidge (''The Oratio S. Columbani," in
"the penitential regime was central to Columbanian monasticism in the generation after his Columbanus: Studies on the Latin Writings, pp. 27r-73) sees as likely by Columbanus; and the
death, whereas in his own writings such themes as the perception of human life as a peregri- hymn "Precamur pattem;' which Lapidge (" 'Precamur Patrem': An Easter Hymn by Colum-
natio alienated from a heavenly patria were more prominent''; Charles-Edwards, "The Peni- banus?" in ibid., pp. 255-63) argues is Columbanian as well. For the text of this hymn, see The
tential of Columbanus;' in Columbanus: Studies on the Latin Writings, ed. Lapidge, p. 2I9. Antiphonary ofBangor, an Early Irish Manuscript in the Ambrosian Library at Milan, ed. F. E.

rs6} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { 157
emotions that Columbanus expressed, almost always in the context of reli- ing even when manipulated, artd it is significant that, in the next generation,
gious feeling. this easy use of amor gave way to reticence. 130
Unlike the Neustrian courtiers, Columbanus was glad to express his af- If at ease with love, Columbanus was nevertheless profoundly ambiva-
fection lavishly, while he was less interested in hierarchy and deference. lent about it. As he pointed out to Athala, whom he left behind at Luxeuil
True, when writing to Pope Gregory I, he piled up honorifics in his saluta- because of his exile, "There is danger if [the monks] hate and danger if they
tion while demeaning himself: "To the holy Lord and Father in Christ, the love. Know that certain realities are involved in both hating and loving:
most beautiful ornament of the Roman Church, to the most august person peace perishes in hatred while integrity perishes in love.'' 131 Love was bad if
in the whole of parched Europe, to a kind of flower, as it were, to the illus- aimed toward the world: "This world shall pass I ... daily the present life
trious Overseer who has mastered the contemplation of divine eloquence, I, they love [amant] fades away.'' 132 But it was good when directed at eternal
Bar-Jona, a wretched dove [ColumbaiColumbanus means 'dove' in Latin], life: "From earthly things lift up 1 The eyes of your heart. I Love [ama] the
I'
send greeting in Christ.'' 125 But Columbanus was ambivalent about com- most beloved [amantissimos] host of angels.'' 133 Nor were tl1ese sentiments I

mendation, a crucial difference from the Neustrian courtiers. He flouted his exclusive to amor; they applied to love in the guise of dilectio as well: "The
independence from the whole institution right in front of Pope Gregory love [dilectio] of God is the restoration of his image; he loves [diligit] God
himself: "I think it extremely superfluous to commend my own [people] to who keeps his commandments.'' 134 On the other hand: "How shall we flee
you since the Savior decrees that they are to be received as if wallcing in His the world, which we who are in the world ought not to love [diligere] ?" 135
name.'' 126 Yet this came directly after he wished peace to the pope and his Only caritas, for Columbanus a consistently spiritualized form of love, was
dependents. wholly good.
To his own monks, Columbanus was openly affectionate. Consider his Happiness too was ambivalent. "Let the world laugh [rideat] with the
greeting in a letter to them: "To his sweetest [dulcissimis] sons and dearest devil; far be tl1eir happiness [laetitia] from us!" 136 This was the wrong sort
[carissimis] disciples.'' 127 He called Athala "most beloved" (amantissime ).128 of happiness. But there was a right one as well: "the end of the life of the just
Indeed, he used the word so freely that he termed the bishops who opposed is eternal life, rest, perpetual peace, the heavenly fatherland, blessed eternity,
his ideas about Easter "most beloved fathers and brothers" (amantissimi pa- infinite happiness [laetitia ].'' 137 Indeed, laetitia was one of the virtues; in
tres ac fratres). 129 It was a topos, indeed, and here no doubt used to sugar the
otherwise hostile intent of the letter, but we have seen that topoi have mean- 130. Gillian R. Knight, The Correspondence between Peter the Venerable and Bernard ofClair-
vaux: A Semantic and Structural Analysis (Aldershot, I988), chap. I, points out that affection-
ate words in letters may be ways to manipulate relationships, not to express affection per se.
Warren and William Griggs, 2 vols. (London, I895), 2:5-7. On the authenticity of Colum- However, this caution is true of all emotions and is, indeed, one reason why Reddy coined
banus's first letter, addressed to Pope Gregory the Great, see Robert Stanton, "Columbanus, the word "emotives?'
Letter I: Translation and Commentary;' journal ofMedieval Latin 3 ( I993): I49-68. I3L Columbanus, Opera, p. 28: "periculum, si oderint, periculum, si amaverint. Scito
125. Columbanus, Opera, p. 2: "Domino Sancta et in Christo Patri, Romanae pulcherrimo utraque vera esse, inde vel odire vel amare; in odio pax, in amore integritas perit?'
Ecclesiae Decori, totius Europae flaccentis augustissimo quasi cuidam Flori, egregio Specu- I32. Ibid., p. 182: "Mundus iste transibit, I ... Cottidie decrescit I Vita praesens quam
latori, Theoria utpote divinae Castalitatis potito, ego, Bar-Jona (vilis Calumba), in Christo amant?'
mitto Salutem?' I borrow the translation offlaccentis as "parched" and the reading of potito I33 Ibid., p. I84: "De terrenis eleva I Tui cordis oculos; I Ama amantissimos I Angelornm
I.
!' (rather than perito) from Stanton, "Columbanus, Letter I:' pp. 152, 156-58. I am gratefill to populos?'
Laura Peelen, University of Utrecht, for pointing out to me that Columbanus was more in- I34. Ibid., p. ro6: "Dei enim dilectio imaginis eius renovatio. Deum autem diligit qui eius
terested in hierarchy than I had first imagined. mandata custodit?'
I26. Columbanus, Opera, p. ro: "Persuperfluum puto commendare tibi meos, quos salva- 135. Ibid., p. 74: "Nos quomodo fugiemus mundum, quem diligere non debemus, qui in
tor quasi in suo nomine ambulantes recipiendos esse decernit?' mundo sumus?'
I27. Ibid., p. 26. I36. Ibid., p. 82: "Rideat mundus cum diabolo, absit a nobis eorumlaetitia?'
128. Ibid., p. 28. I37 Ibid., p. 96: "Justorum autem vitae finis est vita aeterna, requies, pax perennis, patria
129. Ibid., p. I6. caelestis, aeternitas beata, laetitia infinita?'

I 58 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { I59


one of his Rules, Columbanus listed it between patience (patientia) and [flebunt] bitterly'' at the passing of the world.l 42 Like all male ascetics, he
constancy (stabilitas)J3B fled women: "Beware, little son, I the forms of women I Through whom
Fear alone was a uniformly positive emotion, as it was for the Neustrian deatl1 enters?'l43 But here he was upbraiding men for the sins oflust and de-
courtiers. "Fear greatly [expavescite], I beg you, the weight of his words [re- sire, not women for their melodramatics.
ferring to Matt r6:27, which threatens divine retribution], and with your Indeed, none of the other emotional communities that we have seen as-
mind uplifted in fear and trembling [cum timore et tremore ], think constantly sociated women so clearly with excessive emotions as did tl1e Neustrian
of the terrible advent of divine judgment?'l39 Fear of the Last Judgment was courtiers.l44 Gregory the Great thought parents of both sexes overprotected
its most frequent association, but fear was also useful in this world, as when their children; St. Felicity was his one shining exception. Fortunatus cele-
Columbanus cautioned Athala to "fear" (time) the love of the monks at brated rather than denigrated both male and female passion. Gregory of
Luxeuil "because it will be dangerous to you?'l40 Tours considered mothers to be tender and had no qualms about such feel-
The general ambivalence toward emotions extended to how they should ings in himsel I do not wish to argue tl1at the Neustrian courtiers consti-
be expressed. Columbanus was uncomfortable with effusiveness. In his let- tuted the first emotional community to bring a jaundiced attitude toward
ter to his brethren he wrote: women to the fore. That view was constructed out of shards left over from
the repertory of words, phrases, and ideas of the ancient world. But an atti-
I wanted to write to you a tearful [lacrimosam] letter. But because I
tude need not be new to be important. Talcen together with the same
know your heart, therefore I have used another style, mentioning only
group's disparagement of emotions in general, it was a defining characteris-
necessary duties, harsh and arduous in themselves, and preferring to
tic of their emotional community. That community was shaped by the re-
stop up [obturare] rather than call forth fprovocare] tears. And so out-
gime's own dynastic interests, as we have noted. But it was also a by-
wardly my words seem calm [mitis], [but] grief [dolor] is enclosed
product of the intense comradery of the court, a quasi-monastic group that
within. See: the tears rush forth; but it is better to stop up [obturare] tl1e
had to outdo real monks in its wariness of emotional involvement and ex-
fountain, for it is not right for a brave soldier to weep [plorare] in bat-
tle,l41 pression if it were to gain the kingdom of heaven.

Columbanus here managed to condemn a demonstrative emotive style Columbanus's ascetic impulse and the emotional norms that went with it
while nevertheless exploiting it to tl1e hilt. were absorbed as well as adapted and transformed by tl1e courtiers ofNeus-
Did Columbanus think that the "brave soldier" was the antithesis of the tria of the next generation. Like him, they privileged love. Happiness they
"weak woman"? Did he, like the Neustrian fraternity, associate excessive expressed as well-we have seen their longing for it-and even a charter
emotionality with mothers? There is no evidence of it. He did not gender from the period, a confirmation for Saint-Denis issued by Dagobert circa
female those "happy people" who "laugh without reason" and "will weep 632, begins with the hope that transitory things may be transformed into
"eter~al joys" (gaudia sempeterna). 145 The emphasis on male-male bonds
turned the court into a monastery manque. Only their celebration of status
138. Ibid., p. 136.
showed the attraction of secular habits. The Neustrian courtiers incorpo-
139. Ibid., p. 98: "Expavescite, quaeso, dictorum pondus, et cum timore et tremore sus-
rated hierarchy into the Columbanian model by malcing deference part of
pecta semper mente ilium tremendum divini judicii advenn1m indesinenter cogitate?'
their male fraternity culture. There was a "cost;' however: male-male bonds
140. Ibid., p. 28: "Sed m et ipsum eorum time amorem, quia tibi periculosus erit?'
I4I. Ibid., p. 30: "Lacrimosam tibi volui scribere epistolam; sed quia scio cor mum, idcirco
necessariis tanmm allegatis, duris et ipsis arduisque, altero stilo usus sum, malens obturare 142. Ibid., p. I84.
quam provocare lacrimas. Foris itaque acms est sermo mitis, inms inclusus est dolor. En 143. Ibid., p. r82: "Caveto, filiole, 1Feminarum species, I Per quas mars ingredimr?'
promunt lacrimae, sed melius est obmrare fontem; non enim fortis militis est in bello pia- 144. Though there is a hint of this in Plato; see chap. r above.
rare."
145. ChLA 13, no. 551, p. ro ; MGH D Merov, r:4r, p. no.

r6o} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Courtly Discipline { r6r
were drained of effusive emotional expression. Since tl1e deference w " f
th' ld" . as o
1s w~r , 1t could not properly be accompanied by passionate vows of
love, g1ven the values and goals of the monldike group involved in such ex-
changes. But soon those values and goals would f:-dU11 by the ways1'de, as a
new and far less fraternal community came to the fore.

The last of Clothar's courtiers, the indefatigable Dado (St. Audoin), died in
68+.1 But even before that moment the moderated tones of the emotional
community that had formed under Clothar II were dying away. Consider
Fredegar, a historian who wrote between 659 and 714, probably circa 66o. 2
His Chronicle is rightly associated with Jonas's Life of Columbanus, for he
knew the text and happily borrowed its vilification of Queen Brunhild. 3 But,
except where he copied this source, his emotional palette was quite different.
Hatred (odium), for example, was a word that the Neustrian courtiers almost
never used. It came up only once in the Life ofColumbanus, to speak of a food
preference: a young nun's excessive hunger was punished by God's exciting
in her "hatred [odium] of licit food;' so that she could find solace only in
"grain husks, leaves, and mixed wild herbs?'4 Desiderius was still more cir-
cumspect, never using the word "hatred" or any of its variants at all. His

I. For the date, see VitaAudoini episcopi Rotomagensis, ed. Wilhelm Levison, MGH SRM
5:540 (hereafter VitaAudoini).
2. Roger Collins gives a wide range of possible dates for Fredegar (Fredegar, Authors of the
Middle Ages, Historical and Religious Writers of the Latin West, vol. 4, no. 13 [Aldershot,
1996], p. 83), but on p. m he points out that "the balance of probability" has Fredegar a lay-
man writing around 66o. For a forceful presentation of the date "in or shortly after 659;' and
for Fredegar as a member of one faction of the Austrasian aristocracy, see Ian N. Wood, "Fre-
degar's Fables;' in Historiographie im friihen Mittelalter, ed. Anton Scharer and Georg
Scheibelreiter (Vienna, 1994), 359-66. For a review of the scholarship on Fredegar, see the in-
troduction to Fredlgaire, Chronique des temps merovingiens (Livre IV et Continuations), trans.
Olivier Devillers and Jean Meyers (Turnhout, 2oor), pp. 5-53.
3. For example, chap. 36 ofFredegar's Chronicle is taken (as Wallace-Hadrill remarks) "ver-
batim, with very few additions, and some omissions that obscure the sense of tl1e original,
from the Vita Columbani ofJonas"; Fredegar, Chronicle 36, ed. Wallace-Hadrill, p. 23 n. 2. In
particular, Fredegar follows Jonas, Vita Columbani I.I8-I9 and part of 20, MGH SRM 4:86-
91, precisely the segment that has to do with Columbanus's confrontation with Brunhild and
its aftermath.
4. Jonas, Vita Columbani 2.22, p. 142: "excitavit odium liciti cibi, nee valebat tnrbata mens
aliud quicquam quam furfures frondesque et herbarum agrestium mixtnram edere?'

r62} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


mother used it once, draining it of worldly passion by attributing it to God tl1ey did not know one another, even if tl1ey lived generations apart, they still
"Do not consent to or act upon the bad works that God hates [odit]?'5 . had a city and its ongoing traditions in common. The "community" of Gre-
By contrast, Fredegar saw hatred everywhere. It (and other powerful gory of Great was problematic in a different way: it was approached by ex-
emotions) explained human action. Thus "the Burgundian nobles, whether ploring one individual's ideas and modes of expression as if they constituted
bishops or other lords, fearing [timentis] Brunhild and feeling hatred a window onto tl1e emotional norms of a larger social cadre. But the exten-
toward her [odium in eam habentesJ:' called on Clothar to take over their sion seemed warranted, given Gregory's sensitivity as a observer of his flock
6
kingdom. When he had done so, he spared Merovech, the son ofTheud- and his own participation in a particular clerical group. Gregory ofTours and
eric, and executed Brunhild, both motivated by his strong feelings: Fortunatus were more promising. Admittedly a small community of two,
tl1ey nevertheless represented a real social entity, one that reached beyond
By o:der of ~lo~ar, Merovech was secretly sent to N eustria, [since Clothar]
chenshed him w1th that love [eodem amplectens amoreJ with which he had tl1emselves to the many people, particularly at the Austrasian court, with
raised him from the holy [baptismal] font .... [But] when Brunhild was whom they maintained contact over a long period of time. The N eustrian
presented to his sight, Clothar felt overwhelming hatred toward her [odium courtiers assembled by and around Clothar II and his progeny had a similar
con~a ipsam nimium haberit] ... and ordered that she be led through the social reality, and happily we had more evidence for their relationships and
entrre army seated on a camel and afterward that the hair of her head, one their emotional norms. We were thus able to call upon tl1e writings not of
foot, and an arm be tied to the tail of the most vicious horse. And then she just two men, but ofDesiderius, his mother, Eligius, Jonas, and a few others.
was torn apart limb by limb by its hooves and the speed of its pace. 7 By contrast, the late seventh-century writings to be discussed in this
chapter can boast no common city or court. Nor can we demonstrate that
It is tempting to imagine that Fredegar was a harbinger of the new emo- the authors knew one another, though they certainly read one another (as
tional community of the late seventl1 century which we shall soon discuss. various literary borrowings indicate), and their audiences must have over-
Certainly that community privileged strong emotions, vehemently expressed. lapped. What allows us to bring tl1em together here as representative of an
But because Fredegar was writing (it would seem) a decade earlier, he cannot emotional community? The answer is that in the period circa 670-700,
securely be brought into rapprochement with any other writers. It is not until when these sources were written, the elites of Francia were less tied than
the last two or three decades of the seventh century that a duster of sources previously to particular regions. Those of Burgundy were absorbed into the
emerge that may be associated -though uncertainly-with one another. political life of Neustria already in the time of Dagobert; they no longer
wanted a Icing of their own. The elites of Austrasia were moving in the same
A COMMUNITY OF ANONYMOUS AUTHORS? direction in the 67os, when one faction there joined Ebroin, the former
The late seventh-century community that this chapter embraces is the most Neustrian mayor of the palace, in his bid to regain power in Neustria. 8
tenuous of all we have dealt with. The communities of those who commis- Later, in the 68os, the Austrasians ceased to have a king altogether, while
sioned epitaphs at Vienne, Trier, and Clermont, for example, were at least one faction of its magnates, under tl1e leadership of Pippin II, began to can-
members of the same locality, defined and circumscribed by place. Even if nibalize Neustria. The process began with war (at Bois-du Pays in 679; at
Tertry in 687) and continued with the Pippinids and their followers marry-
5 VitaDesiderii 9, MGH SRM 4:56; see chap. 5, note n6 above. ing into Neustrian families, becoming Neustrian landowners, and slowly
6. Fredegar, Chronicle, p. 34: "Burgundaefaronis vero tarn episcopi quam cited leudis ti-
talcing over patronage of tl1e N eustrian church. 9 Elsewhere, the same sort of
mentis Brunechildem et odium in earn habentes?'
7. Ibid., p. 35: "Meroeus secrecius iusso Chlothariae in Neptrico perducetur, eodem am-
plectens amore quod ipso de sancto excepisset lavacrum ... Chlotharius, cum Brunechildis
I.
8. Passiones Leudegarii episcopi et martyris Augustodunensis I (hereafter Passio Leudegarii) 18,
suum presentatur conspectum et odium contra ipsam nimium haberit, ... iobetque earn 19, 25, 26, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 5:300-301, 306-7.
prius camillum per omne exercito sedentem perducere, post haec coman1 capitis, unum 9. I do not mean to suggest the inevitability of this process nor that its end result-the Car-
pedem et brachium ad veciosissemum aequum caudam legare: ibique calcibus et velocitate olingian takeover-would have been clear to people in the last decades of the seventh cen-
cmsus membratim disrumpetur?'
tmy. See the discussion in Gerberding, The Rise of the Carolingians, chap. 6.

164 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Rcveling in Rancor { 165
homogenization was taking place: the Martyrdom of Praejectus shows that ground of their own day in part by means of a highly charged emotional
even the elites of the Auvergne were drawn into the political orbits of the and moral vocabulary.
northern kings.Io
It will be convenient for the reader to have a brief list of these materials,
The much-noted violence of the late seventh century was due not to re- here organized (where possible) alphabetically by the name of their hero or
gionalism or separatism but to a common desire for access to an increas- heroine: 12
ingly centralized court and its powers. 11 We are no longer in Gregory's and
Fortunatus's world of fraternal civil wars. The aristocracy was more power- The Life of Bishop Audoin. 13 This is the life of Dado (Audoin),
1.
ful now, and its competition was key to the fighting of the period-and to whom we have met as a member of Desiderius's "indivisible" quintet.
our sources, which reflect the interests of the elites. Several of these texts are The author is anonymous, but he knew Audoin's disciples, who told
passiones, accounts of the deaths-interpreted as "martyrdoms"-of men, him about the saint's mirades.l 4 It is thus likely that he wrote between
now called "saints;' who led particular elite factions. We might think that 684 (Audoin's date of death) and around 704. Because he uses the word
such factions would imply different-perhaps even polarized-emotional Franci to mean "the Neustrians;' he was likely writing to the Neustrian
communities. But this does not appear to have been the case. The important elites. 15
point-from the emotional point of view-is the sharing of common values 2. The Life of Lady Balthild. 16 This is the life of Queen Balthild,
and goals, even if such "sharing" engenders competition. Let us recall the whom we met in the previous chapter as a patron ofEligius and Jonas.
very definition of emotions: they have to do with appraisals of things affect- The author is anonymous; the fact that the prologue addresses "dilectis-
ing me. The sources that we shall be looking at, no matter their place of ori- simi fratres" (most beloved brethren) does not seem decisive for his or
gin, were obsessed by the motives behind power holding, power grabbing, her identification as maleP The author wrote the Life after Balthild's
and power sharing. That they often found these motives in strong and usu-
ally rancorous emotions betrays the hold that these feelings had on their au-
12. Here I have not considered the Acta S. Annemundi [i.e.,Aunemundi], AASS, Sept. VII,
thors' imagination and modes of presentation. From their writings we can
pp. 694-96, because, although "rehabilitated" as a source of the seventh cenmry by Fouracre
glimpse the emotions that they privileged or downgraded, their frequency
and Gerberding in Late Merovingian France, pp. 170-71, "descriptive passages" are likely in-
of expression, and the contexts in which they arose. Like all shaped mate- terpolated (p. 171). Since the emotions are precisely in these passages, it seems prudent to
rials, these sources had not only purely "expressive" purpose but also eliminate this text for our purposes.
rhetorical ends; they were meant to interpret the past for the interests of the 13. VitaAudoini, pp.553-67.
present. The sources from circa 670 to 700 are nostalgic, though not a bit 14. Ibid., 7, p. 558; see Late Merovingian France, ed. and trans. Fouracre and Gerberding,
sentimental: they look back on a violent period and claim the virtuous high P 133
15. Ibid., 13, p. 562. On the significance of the term Franci, see Gerberding, The Rise of the
Carolingians, p. 76.
16. Vita Sanctae [i.e., Domnae] Balthildis A (hereafter Vita Balthildis), ed. Bruno Krusch,
ro. Passio Praejecti episeopi et martyris Arverni, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 5:225-48
MGH SRM 2:482-508.
(hereafter Passio Praejecti); see the comments on how this text shows the.integration of the
17. Vita Balthildis pro!., p. 482: "Michi quidem, ut imperatum est, dilectissimi fratres, ad
Auvergne in the politics of the north in Late Merovingian France, ed. and tians. Fouracre and
tan1 subtile piumque opus peragendum?' (To me indeed, most beloved brothers, it was com-
Gerberding, pp. 269-70.
manded to complete so fine and pious a work.) A male author is proposed by Fouracre and
n. See Paul Fouracre, "Attinides towards Violence in Seventh- and Eighth-Cenmry Fra.Jl-
Gerberding in Late Merovingian France, p. II5, because "the first line of the preface ... ex-
cia;' in Violence and Society in the Early Medieval West, ed. Guy Halsall (Woodbridge, 1998),
pressly dedicates the work to the author's dilectissimi fratres." However, the author does not
pp. 60-75; and, assessing the importance of regional variations, idem, "The N an1re of Frank-
say he or she is a member of the fraternity, and it seems equally plausible to argue, with Janet
ish Political Instimtions in the Seventh Cenmry;' in Franks and Alemanni in the Merovingian
L. Nelson, that "the 'N. Vita was evidently written by a nun at Chelles, and commissioned by
Period: An Ethnographic Perspective, ed. Ian Wood (Woodbridge, 1998), pp. 285-3or. See also some monks-perhaps those ofCorbie?" See Nelson, "Queens as Jezebels: The Careers of
I the excellent interpretive sections in Late Merovingian France, ed. and trans. Fouracre and
Brunhild a11d Balthild in Merovingian History;' in eadem, Politics and Ritual in Early Me-
, I Gerberding.
dieval Europe (LOndon, 1986), p. 17 n. 83.
166 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Reveling in Raneor { 167
death, circa 68o, perhaps quite shortly thereafter. 18 Because the Franci
here meant the Neustrians, the autl1or was, again, probably writing to the Columbanian tradition, first at Remiremont, then at Luxeuil, and
N eustrians.l 9 finally at Grandval (in Alsace), which he founded. The author of his Life
3. The Vision ofBarontus. 20 Barontus was a nobleman, recently con- was a priest named Bobolenus. 25 He wrote after Germanus's marty~
verted to tl1e religious life at the monastery of Saint Peter in Longoret, dom in about 675, probably quite soon thereafter. 26 Although he dedi-
cated the Life to Ingofrid, abbot ofLuxeuil, the connection to Luxeuil
near Bourges. His near-death and out-of-body experience first in
heaven and then in hell is recounted here. The author, probably a monk does not necessarily link him to the Neustrian court, since Luxeuil had
at Longoret or nearby Meobecq, presumably wrote his account shortly supporters in Austrasia as well. Thus, it is not surpri~il~g to read that
after the vision, which took place in 678 or 679. 2 1 Although the imme- Germanus was part of the Austrasian court of S1g1bert Ill, and
Bobolenus too seems best understoo d m . an Austras1an . context .27
diate audience was no doubt the monks ofLongoret and Meobecq, the
fact that the Vision places Bishops Dido ofPoitiers (d. ea. 677) and Vul- 5. The Life ofSt. Gertrude. 28 This is the life of the sister of Grimoald (a
foleodus of Bourges (d. ea. 672) in hell suggests that tl1e author had in Pippinid mayor in Austrasia who was executed by Clo~is ~I) and
mind a larger public as well. 22 Dido appears in the Martyrdom ofLeude- daughter of Pippin I (an earlier mayor of tl1e palace) and h1s w1fe, Itta.
gar (below) not only as tl1e saint's uncle but as a man "filled with an ex- Gertmde was abbess ofNivelles, one of several monasteries founded by
traordinary abundance of pmdence.''23 If, as it seems, the author of her mother. She died m653, and her Life was composed circa 670. 29 The
author was a monk, probably connected to Nivelles.
Leudegar's life was speaking to one faction of the Frankish aristocracy,
the author of the Vision clearly spoke for and to a different group. 24 6. The Martyrdom of St. Leudegar. 30 This recounts the martyrdom of
Bishop Leudegar. A member of the supra-regional elite mentioned
4. The Life ofGermanus) Abbot ofGrandva!. Germanus was a monk in
above, Leudegar, whose brother was count of Paris, was appointed
bishop of tl1e Burgundian city of Autun by Queen Balthild. 31 The .au-
I8. On the date of the Vita Balthildis see Late Merovingian France> ed. and trans. Fouracre thor of his Life) whose name is not known, was a monk at Samt-
and Gerberding, pp. II4-I5.
J9. VitaBalthildis w, p. 495, where theFranci> i.e., the Neustrians, kill Bishop Sigobrandus
of Paris.

20. Visio Baronti monachi Longoretensis> ed. Wilhelm Levison, MGH SRM 5:377-94. See Neustrian court" and thus a nahiral enemy of the "Burgundian" Leudegar, the "Austrasian"
also Maria Pia Ciccarese, Visioni delPAldita in occidente. Fonti> modelli> testi (Florence, I987), Dido, and perhaps even of the "Neustrian" Vulfoleodus.
pp. 23I-75 (giving the text of the Visio and annotated Italian translation); Claude Carozzi, Le 25. Bobolenus, Vita Germani abbatis Grandivallensis> ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 5:33
voyt!!Je de Pame dans Pau-dela> d>apres la litterature latine: V'-XIII' siecle (Rome, I994 ), chap. 3. (hereafter Vita Germani), ~here the author calls himself"Bobolenus exiguus omnium pres-
21. For the date, see Carozzi, Voyage de Pame> p. I4o, and John J. Contreni, "'Building byterorum" (Bobolenus, least of all priests). . .
Mansions in Heaven': The Visio Baronti> Archangel Raphael, and a Carolingian King;' Specu- 26. Following the argument ofHans J. Hummer, Politics and Power m Early Medteval Eu-
lum 78 (2003): 673 n. 2. rope: Alsace and the Frankish Realm> 6oo-rooo (Cambridge, 2005), ch~p. I..
22. On the local nature of the Visio's audience, see Yitzhak Hen, "The Structure and Aims 27. Bobolenus, Vita Germani I, p. 33, where Germanus's brother IS said to have been edu-
of the Visio Baronti/' journal of Theological Studies> n.s., 47 (I996): 477-97; and Isabel Mor- cated "under King Sigibert?' Germanus's family came from Trier, and Germanus was p~r-
eira, Dreams> Visions> and Spiritual Authority in Merovingian Caul (Ithaca, N. Y., 2000 ), p. I59 trayed by Bobolenus as a disciple of Arnulf of Metz (see 1bd
I ., 4, PP 34-35 ), a keyAustras1an
.
Michelle L. Raper argues that the vision may have been a "repository of the monastic rule" figure, while his murderer, the Alsatian dux Adalricus Eticho (see ibid., n, p. 38, wh~re he IS
and thus mainly (though not entirely) addressed to the community itself; Raper, "Uniting termed Chaticus) was deeply involved in Austrasian political factionalism. On Luxeuil's close
the Community of the Living with the Dead: The Use of Other-World Visions in the Early relations with both the N eustrian and Austrasian courts, see Wood, Merovingian Kingdoms>
Middle Ages;' in Authority and Community in the Middle Ages> ed. Donald Mowbray, Rhian- p.I92. .
non Purdie, and I an P. Wei (Stroud, I999 ), p. 29. 28. Vita Sanctae Geretrudis A> ed. Bruno Krusch, MGH SRM 2:453-64 (hereafter Vtta
23. Passio Leudegarii I, p. 283: "prudentia divitiarumque opibus insigne copia erat repletus?' Geretrudis).
24. But here I part with Carozzi, Voyage de Pame> pp. I43-44, who sees the factions as hav- 29. LateMerovingian France> ed. and trans. Fouracre and Gerberding, p. 303 n. IO.

ing "national" origins, with Barontus a "son or relative of an Aquitainian in the service of the 30. Passio Leudegarii> pp. 282-324.
31. See LateMerovingian France> ed. and trans. Fouracre and Gerberding, P I98.
I68 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Reveling inRancor { I69
Symphorien in Leudegar's episcopal city. He was commissioned to
ascetic, lived briefly at the monasteries of Bobbio and Romainmotier
write by Hermenar, who was his former abbot, counterclaimant to
before becoming abbot of his own foundation, Fontanelle, near
Leudegar's see, and eventually Leudegar's successor at Autun. Writing
Rouen. His anonymous Life, written after 684 (i.e., after Audoin's
after Leudegar's death circa 678 but likely before Leudegar's relics were
death), probably circa 700, 37 puts its hero in close touch with both the
transferred to Poitiers in 684, the writer represents the Neustrian/Bur- N eustrian and Austrasian elites. 38
gundian faction that once opposed Leudegar but now wished to claim
IO. Original Latin charters of seventh-century Francia. These are
his fame for themselves. 32
legal documents drawn up by kings, bishops, and very wealthy mag-
J. The Martyrdom ofSt. Praejectus. 33 This is the account of the life and
nates. They have been published in facsimile and transcription by Hart-
death of Praejectus, bishop of Clermont. He was a member of an Au-
mutAtsma and Jean Vezin.3 9 Including wills, judgments (placita), priv-
vergnat family of the lesser nobility. The author was perhaps a nun from
ileges, and confirmations, those extant today represent a tiny fraction of
the monastery of ChamaW:res, a house founded at Praejectus's urging
tl1e charters that must have been written during the period. But because
and presided over by an abbess who was probably a member ofPraejec-
there is no doubt about tl1eir authenticity, they may be mined for the
tus's family. Alternatively the author may have been male and a monk,
emotional vocabulary that they use-and do not use.
perhaps at Volvic or Saint-Amarin. The Martyrdom was written shortly
after Praejectus's murder in 676 at the hands of a faction loosely aligned
Many of these writings were haunted by the ghosts of Ebroin, mayor
with St. Leudegar and at loggerheads with tl1e Austrasians. It must
of the Neustrian palace, and Leudegar, Balthild's Burgundian episcopal
have been completed by 690, the date of the death of Bishop Avitus of
appointee. Onto these wraiths our mainly anonymous authors projected
Clermont, during whose lifetime the piece was written.
emotional lives very different from those of the N eustrian courtiers in the
8. The Life of St. Sadalbe1lJa. 34 This is the tale of Sadalberga, of noble first part of the same century. They used emotion words liberally and
birth, who was healed of blindness by tl1e Columbanian abbot Eusta-
with verve. They expected people-both men and women-to be pas-
sius of Luxeuil. Mter two marriages (both against her will) and many
sionate: to love, hate, exult in joy, and break down in tears. Above all,
children, she converted to the religious life. She first founded a monas-
they foregrounded rancorous and fearful feelings. Even the Devil was
tery at Langres, but, anticipating the wars between Theuderic Ill and
accorded a complex emotional life in these writings. The emotional com-
Dagobert II in the 67os, she established a more permanent foundation
munity of the elites of late seventh-century Francia saw emotions as ani-
at Laon and became its abbess. She died circa 670. The author of her
mating elements of thought, behavior, and human (and inhuman) inter-
Life says that he or she wrote at the request of Sadalberga's daughter action.
and successor at Laon. Dismissed as a ninth-century forgery by Bruno
Krusch, the Life's authenticity and a seventh-century date (ea. 68o) have
FREQUENCIES
recently been forcefully argued by Hans Hummer. 35
Let us begin to explore this new emotional community via its charters. This
9. The Life of St. Wandregisil. 36 Wandregisil (d. 668), a noble turned may at first appear foolhardy: formulaic in the extreme, charters are a rela-

32. On the date, ibid., p. 201; on the circumstances of its writing, pp. 201-6 and Joseph-
Claude Poulin, "Saint Uger d'Autun et ses premiers biographes (fin VIle-milieu JXe siecle);'
37. See the remarks ofBruno Kmsch, MGR SRM n.
Bulletin de la Societe desAntiquaires de l'Ouest, 4th ser., 16 (1977): 167-200, esp. 176- 8.
7 38. Vita Wandregiseli 3, p. 14, where he serves as a royal tax collector (i.e., for Dagobert,
33 For the information below, I follow Fouracre and Gerberding in Late Merovingian
France, pp. 254-70. who was king of Austrasia); ibid., 7, p. 16, where he is brought to court by Dagobert II for
taking the tonsure without royal permission (but ultimately reconciles with the king); ibid.,
34. Vita SadalbellJae abbatissae Laudunensis, ed. Bruno Krusch, MGR SRM 5:40-66.
14, p. 19, where his monastery at Fontanelle is described as "ex fisco quem adsumpsit regale
35. Hans Hummer, "Die merowingische Herkunft der Vita Sadalbergae;' Deutsches Archiv
munere" (on fiscal land which he received by royal generosity), and ibid., p. 20, where he is
for Eiforschung desMittelalters 59 (2003): 459-93.
"carus Dadone pontefice" (dear to Bishop Dado, i.e., Audoin).
36. Vita Wandregiseli abbatis Fontanellensis, ed. Bnmo Krusch, MGR SRM s:r3-24.
39. ChLA 13-14 concern the seventh centmy.
'
:I 170 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Rcveling in Rancor { 171
tively unemotional genre. Yet precisely because of their resistance to even the charters prior to 670 changed thereafter. Five, rather than two, of the
minor verbal c~1anges, documents such as these can be telling when they do first datable ten charters from that later period contain emotion words. 43
betray somethmg new. Moreover, they bear comparison because they are Moreover, the emotion words in those charters are more wide ranging,
fairly equal in length, containing between about ten and a hundred lines of more daring than those of the earlier sample. When, in 673, a lady named
text. Clotild, Deo devota (dedicated to God), endowed tl1e monastery of
Consider, then, the first (datable) ten charters drawn up before 67o.4o Bruyeres-le-Chatel and installed her niece Mummola as abbess there, she in-
We have already briefly mentioned the only two that used emotion words: cluded a curse clause at the end that called down the wrath (iram) of the
the charter ofDagobert on behalf of Saint-Denis circa 632 and the charter of Holy Trinity on anyone who might dare to oppose the provisions of her
Clovis II confirming a privilege by Bishop Landeric of Paris in 654-.41 The charter.44 Mter a council deposed Chranilinus from the bishopric of Em-
first spoke of "eternal joys:' the second repeatedly spoke of love and fear. brw1, Theuderic III, "moved by mercy'' (mesericordia muti), lifted the sen-
Doubtless the emotions could not have been "deeply felt" in the modern tence of exile and allowed the man to convert to the monastic life at Saint-
sense. Nevertheless, the words are significant. Just as the royal confirmation Denis.4S When Wademir and Ercamberta gave their properties to various
of Landeric's privilege listed the sorts of properties that Saint-Denis had churches and monasteries, Wademir referred to his wife as "sweetest'' (dul-
been given (estates, slaves, gold and silver), so it needed to describe the mo- cissema).46
tives for those gifts-religious, righteous, and (the implication is there) Moving beyond the first ten charters extant after 670, we see-in an ex-
deeply held-which justified the provisions of the exemption itsel The ex- emption granted by Agerad, the bishop of Chartres, to Notre-Dame de
emption prohibited the bishop-Landeric himself-from taking any of the Bourgmoyen in 696-all the emotions of the confirmation for Landeric's
properties belonging to the monastery. 42 This was a major sacrifice on Lan- exemption, plus some telling new ones. 47 Here tl1e "fear of God:' which is
deric's part, and the royal confirmation's reiterated emotion words justified certainly mentioned, is joined by the worldly fear (even stronger, if the in-
it. The words were not formulaic, however routine they may sound. In- tensifier per- is taken into account) that tl1e monks felt about being deprived
deed, they were not formulaic because they appeared in only two out of ten of their property. Thus the privilege is granted "so tl1at it may be allowed to
charters. the holy congregation of the servants of God ... to live in peace, such that
However-and this is the key point-the largely unemotional tenor of they need not fear [pertimiscant] having to give anyone meals [convivia],

40. From the end of the sixth century to a charter dated 660-73 there are thirteen charters 43. There are eleven documents between 673 and 693, but ChLA 13, no. 569 (= Pardessus, i!
I
but one (ChLA 13, no. 549 [6r9j2o]) is too fragmentary to be useful, and two of them (nos: no. 413) ca1mot be dated with precision. All but three of the remainder were issued by a king.
557 [658/59-678/79] and 560 [657-88]) straddle the 670 divide by too wide a margin to be The documents are: ChLA 13, nos. 564 ( = Pardessus, no. 361) [673; monastic foundation]; il
l'i
counted here. The ten that remain were all issued by kings. The documents (with their corre- 566 (I2I) [679; gift ofTheuderic Ill]; 565 (r22) [679; judgment byTheuderic Ill]; 568 (r23)
sponding number in MGR D Merov in parenthesis, and dates etc. in brackets) are: ChLA 13 , [679-90; privilege dfTheuderic Ill]; 567 (126) [682; placitum ofTheuderic Ill]; 570 (r3r)
nos. 550 (22) [584-628; confirmation of Clothar II]; 552 (28) [625; confirmation of Clothar [690; gift of Theuderic Ill]; 571 ( = Pardessus, no. 412) [ 690-91; gifts to churches]; 563 ( =
II]; 554 (32) [629-37; confirmation ofDagobert I]; 551 (41) [632-33; confirmation ofDago- Pardessus, no. 421) [69r?; exchange of land]; ChLA 14, nos. 572 (135) [692; placitum ofCio-
bert I]; 556 (72) [639; confirmation ofCiovis II]; 555 (74) [639-49/50; charter of protection vis Ill]; 573 (!37) [693; placitum ofCiovis Ill].
by Clovis II]; 559 (75) [639-49/50; confirmation ofCiovis II]; 558 (85) [654; confirmation of 44. ChLA 13, no. 564, p. 66 = Pardessus 2:148-50, no. 36r. On this charter see Uon Levil-
~lovis II]; 561 (93) [659-60; placitum (court hearing) ofCiothar Ill]; 553 (94) [660-73; plac- lain, "Etudes merovingienne. La charte de Clotilde (ro mars 673);' Bibliotheque de l'Ecole des
Itum of Clothar Ill]. chartes 105 (1944): 5-63, at p. 20. On the histmy and significance of maledictmy curses, see
4!. ChLA 13, no. 551, p. ro = MGR D Merov, r:ro8-ro, no. 41; ChLA 13, no. 558, pp. 36-37 Little, Benedictine Maledictions.
= MGR D Merov, r:218, no. 85. See chap. 5, notes So and 145. 45. ChLA 13, no. 565, p. 69. The charter is dated 679 in MGR D Merov 122, p. 310.
42. On Merovingian immunities and exemptions in general, see Rosenwein, Negotiating 46. ChLA 13, no. 571, p. 95 = Pardessus 2:2ro, no. 412.
Space, chaps. 2-4, and on this royal confirmation in particular, pp. 74-77. 47. ChLA 14, no. 580, pp. 26-27.

172 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Reveling in Rancor { 173
lodging [mansiones], supplies fparatas ], and gifts [munera].''48 The person times, witl1 amor and caritas preferred over dilectio. Compare this with tl1e
most likely to demand the meals, lodging, supplies, and gifts was the very frequency of rancorous words, which come up tl1irty-four times in the text,
bishop handing out the exemption- the local diocesan bishop- along with envy being by far tl1e commonest. 52 Nearly as frequent are words of fear,
his imagined successors. The document continues by questioning the inten- which appear twenty-nine times, with metus and timor most recurrent. If
tions of such bishops: if the local diocesan is invited to do the various bless- trembling (tremens) is added to tl1e list (as it ought to be), then fear is
ings (of the altar and so on) that the monastery needs, let him not do so for evoked thirty-two times. Like Agerad, the Leudegar autl1or saw strong pas-
the salce of "wicked desire" (pravae cupiditatis). Meanwhile, the monks sions at work in the world. Agerad tried to set up a system tl1at would im-
should govern themselves with an abbot whom they choose for his "honest pede their effects; the Leudegar author created a saint who was their victim.
way of life, ... vigilant and wise in the love [amore] of God.''49 But if they Like an exempt monastery, Leudegar was portrayed as tl1e calm pole around
fail, and the monastery becomes troubled, the bishop should intervene, which the malice, envy, and desire of others raged ineffectually. Thus,
"like a father fpaterno more]:' to restore peace. He must beware, however, though Leudegar was blinded, he did not utter one groan; when his lips
not to dominate the monastery- here follows a list of all the rights he and and tongue were cut off, he nevertheless "brought forth the sounds of
others might not have over it. Malice (malicia), sent by the Devil, has a way words"; as he was led off to his death, he was happy (laetabatur), and when
of obstructing good intentions; hence a curse is placed on any bishop who his head was chopped off, a chorus of angels rejoiced (gaudens). 53 Of course,
might violate the provisions of the privilege. Finally, Agerad speaks of the tl1ese are the topoi of martyrs, but they are particularly impressive here be-
virtues of the monks: "We have seen them desire with the highest desire cause of the strongly rancorous and fearful emotion words swirling around
[summa desiderio desiderare ]" to praise God according to the Rule. He im- tl1em.
plores Christ that they may continue to advance "in love [amore] of God.''SO
The timid evocation of the love and fear of God, the most acceptable Chris- CODED DISPLAYS

tian emotions and ones used frequently by the N eustrian courtiers (as we In tl1ese materials people expre$sed their feelings-or were so portrayed-
have seen), has here given way to a wider spectrum: there is love and fear of graphically and (seemingly) unabashedly. (I say "seemingly'' because all
God, to be sure, but also malice, fear of worldly destitution, and desires emotional expression is shaped.) We see for tl1e first time the widespread
both good -desiderium- and bad -cupiditas. use of some of those gestures that Huizinga considered the hallmarks of tl1e
The increasing emotionalism of the charters is echoed in other texts of medieval mentality-"uninhibited" expressions of grief and joy. We also
the period. In the Martyrdom ofLeudegat; a representative narrative from the once again find-we saw it previously in Gregory of Tours-some of tl1e
period, I count a very large number of different emotion words (twenty- public uses of emotion that Gerd Althoff has dubbed the "rules of the
seven) along with six other words that indicate an emotional state-tears game.''54
'
trembling, and so on. 51 Love is astonishingly absent: it occurs only eight Thus in tl1e Life of Audoin, when the hero returned from Rome to his
diocese, "tl1e citizens outside the walls and tl1e common people, exulting for
48. Ibid., p. 26: "ut liciat sancta congregacioni servorum dei in ipso monastirio constihl-
tum, ... quieti vivire, ut a nullos convivia nee mansionis nee paratas nee munera expedenda
. I non pertimiscant?' tus (4), turbatus (mental) (1), vereor (1). The emotion markers are: commotus (mental) (2),
49. Ibid.: "qui honestis moribus sit, non generositatis nobilium, sed in dei amore exper- fleojdefleo (4), jemitus (i.e., gemitus) (1), inrisio (1), lacrima (1), tremens (3). The frequencies
gencius atque sagacius inbumm?' were obtained by using d1e on-line text provided by the PL database.
so. ChLA 14, no. s8o, p. 27. 52. The other words of rancor: despicio, foror, ira, livor, malitia, moleste, odium.
sr. The emotion words in the Passio Leudegarii (I here list one form, but I have counted 53 Passio Leudegarii 24, p. 306; 30, p. 312; 33, p. 315; 35, P 317.
them in whatever form or part of speech) and their frequency in the text (in parentheses) are: 54 See the introduction, note sr. It is true dut such emotional demonstrations are not en-
amor (4), caritas (3), cupiditas (5), dispereo (1), despicio (1), dilectio (1), doleo (+),formido (2), tirely lacking in the N eustrian materials discussed in chapter 5; d1e shrieks and grief of
foror (6),gaudeo (9), invideo (ro ), ira (5), laetor (3), livor (3), lugeo (3), malitia (3), miseratio (1), Columbanus's followers (see chap. 5 at note 69) are evidence of that. But this is a rare
metus (12), moleste (2), odium (+),pavor (1),p(a)eniteo (4), superbia (5), timor (9 ), terrorjperteri- _instance, and even d1en it is brief compared to the effusions of the later seventh cerli:ury.

174} Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Reveling in Rancor { 175
joy [exultantespraegaudio] and weeping [merentes] at the same time, rolled damned in hell in this story had no compunction about expressing their un-
out in throngs .... Then a lucky messenger notified the royal court of [Au~ happiness graphically: when those who "had done no good in the world"
doin's] advent, and the Icing together with his queen and the nobles of the saw others receiving a snack of manna, "they groaned fgementes ], dosed
palace rejoiced [laetantes] [and] clapped their hands?'55
their eyes, and beat tl1eir breasts rJ;ectora sua percutiebant], and in a loud
Similarly ecstatic was the joy of Arnulf of Metz when he saw the young voice said, 'Woe to us, wretched ones [miseris], who did nothing good when
Germanus: "rejoicing in his heart [ovans animo], he gave thanks to the Cre- we could have? "62 It is more surprising, given tl1e general sway of Stoicism
ator of all [and] received him happily [!actus] and merrily [hilaris]:'56 And in Christianity, tl1at people in heaven were nearly as effusive. Among the
again, when Germanus came to Luxeuil, "all with equally merry faces [una- saved were some of Barontus's fellow monks; when tl1ey saw his soul
nimiter hilari vu/tu] received him joyfully [ovantes] within the monastic en- (anima) (tiny as a newborn chick) and realized that his redemption was in
dosure?'57 The author of the Life of Wandregisil did not hesitate to exhort jeopardy, "tl1ey were inwardly touched by great sorrow [do/ore] ... and
every group to cheer Wandregisil's entty into heaven: "Let the old exult; let they began to groan fgemere ):'63 They found consolation only after tl1e
young people be happy; let adolescents rejoice; let monks be glad!"58 archangel Raphael, Barontus's guide, assured tl1em that he had some hope
Expressions of sorrow tended to be similarly dramatic. If Wandregisil's in the outcome.
eternal redemption prompted joy, his preparations for death moved his In the Life ofAudoin, where (as we have seen) the crowds were elated by
monks to lament noisily: "The brothers ... were very sad [contristati], say- tl1e hero's advent, his death prompted equal, if opposite, sorrow. "There
ing 'What will become of us if you leave us so quiddy, father? We want to was a great wailing rJ;lanctus]; the whole royal entourage was shalcen to its
hear your usual words; we all desire to go on being corrected by your ad- foundation; all of high rank were brought low; all joy turned into lamenta-
monition!' And they prostrated themselves in prayer with groans and tears tion [gaudium in lamento vertitur]; all laughter was silenced [risus quiesci-
fgemito et lacrimis):'59 In the Life of Germanus the monks found the martyr's tur], acute bitterness [amaritudo] grew greater. The royal house mourned
body and bore it back to church "with great wailing" (cum eiulatu magno).60 rJ;langitur] its very prudent counselor, and all the people rose up openly in
The Vision of Barontus had the brethren "weep [lacrimare J for sorrow [do- lamentation [lamentum ):'64 At his funeral there was even the complexity of
lore] very violently'' when they saw his inert body. 61 No wonder that the ambivalent feeling: "Therefore the king with the queen and tl1e assembly of
bishops and the mayor of the palace and the nobles of the palace came to-
gether, carrying the holy man on tl1e bier and celebrating the holy funeral
55. VitaAut:Wini u, p. 560: "Cum autem pervenisset ad fines diocesis suae, suburbani cives
obsequies with grief [merore]; and whoever merited to carry the body of the
et vulgi populus, exultantes prae gaudio simulque merentes, catervatim provolvuntur ...
Exinde felix nuntius ad aulam regalem eius adventum innotuit, et una pariter rex et regina blessed man on his shoulders rejoiced [gaudebat] and considered himself
cum proceribus palatii laetantes simulque plaudentes manibus et benedicentes Christum, qui most highly rewarded?'65
talem virum tann1mque pastorem remeare fecit in eorum regnum?'
56. Vita Germani +,pp. 34-35: ''At vero beams Arnulfi.1s cernens eum, ovans animo, gratias 62. Ibid., 17, p. 392: "sed gementes oculos suos claudebant et pectora sua percutiebant et
agens omnium conditori, excoepit laen1s et hilaris?'
alta voce dicebant: 'Vae nobis miseris, qui nullum bonum, quando potuimus, fecimus!"'
57. Ibid., 6, p. 35: "omnes unanimiter hilari vultu infra monasterii septa recipiunt ovantes?' 63. Ibid., 8, pp. 383-84: ''Ad illi, intrinsecus tacti nimio dolore ... gemere coepemnt?'
58. Vita Wandregiseli 2r, p. 24: "Exultent senes, letenmr jovenes, gaudeant aduliscentes, 64. VitaAut:Wini rs, p. 564: "Fit planctus magnus, onmis regalis dignitas concutimr, omnis
alacri sint monachi?'
altimdo humiliatur, omne gaudium in lamento vertimr, omnis risus quiescimr, amaritudo
59. Ibid., r8, p. 22: "Frattes ... contristati sunt valde, dicentes: 'Quid facmri sumus, ut magna adcrescimr. Domus regia plangitur pmdentissimum consiliarium; sed plane universus
nobis tam cito relinques, pater? Verba ma audire vellemus, adsueta admonicionem mam populus in lamenmm adsurgit?' I owe the translation of "regalis dignitas" as "royal en-
omnes desideramus corregi!' Et prostraverunt se cum gemito et lacrimis in oracione?' tourage" to Fouracre and Gerberding in LateMerovingian France, p. r67.
6o. Vita Germani 13, p. 39: "Illi vero cum eiulato magna deferunt eum in basilicam sancti 65. VitaAut:Wini r6, p. 564: "Igimr rex cum regina et episcopomm convenmm atque maio-
Petri?'
mm domus seu priores palatii una pariter conglobati, sancmm vimm in feretrum depor-
6r. Visio Baronti 2, p. 378: "Qui ut viderunt nullum membrum agitare, lacrimare prae. do- tantes, sancta exsequia cum merore celebrantes, gaudebat se quisque et in maximo lucro dep-
lore vehementer nimis coeperunt."
utabat, qui mereremr beati viri corpus in suis humeris deportasse?'
176 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Reveling in Rancor { 177
Even when, as here, people are depicted as feeling contradictory emo- other great men living there-that it was wondered at by all; but since the
tions, it is possible to speak, as do Althoff and Stephen D. White, of emo- poor received justice, it brought great joy [gaudium ]?' 72 . .
tions' signaling functions. In this case, both grief and joy reflected the di _ The emotions here signal the immense power of the lang or-m the case
nity of the hero; the emotions gave him his due. The passage is comparab7e of Leudegar-the bishop. They are the people's counterpart-their reac-
to those evoking the tears that often, in these materials, 'accompanied tion-to "royal anger;' the ira regis that some historians have argued func-
prayer. Such tears were not understood as a gift of grace but rather served to tioned as an institution of government. 73 Thus in the Life of Sadalbet;ga, the
co~unicate (to. all who saw or learned about them) the overwhelming saint's father, "fearing [metuens] lest he incur the anger and ferocity 'of the
chanty and devotion of the weeper. 66 Wandregisil built a cell for himself Icing [iram regis saevitiamque] on account of his daughter;' who was unmar-
and there he fasted and observed vigils "with daily groans [gemitus J and ried, forced her to wed a courtier of the palace. 74 There is also the anger of
daily tears [lacrimas ]?'67 Lady Balthild took on demeaning services in her Saint Peter in the Vision of Barontus: he had been happy enough to use the
m~nastery "with a joyful [gaudio] and happy [leto] heart, ... and she ap- demons clutching Barontus's soul as informants, but when they resisted his
plied herself ceaselessly to devout prayer with tears [cum lacrimis]?'68 When verdict-finding Barontus's good deeds to overcome his sins-he "was
a wall fell and Praejectus thought it had crushed a bystander, he "poured moved against them in anger [in ira] and began to say twice and three
forth a shower of tears [lacrimarum inbrem], shouting out prayers to the times, 'Begone, evil spirits; begone, enemies of God and ever contrary to
God of Saboath?'69 To be sure, we have seen tears intimately connected to Him, release Barontus?" When tl1ey refused, he tried to hit them on the
prayer before this: Gregory the Great's Eleutherius wept as he prayed for his head with the three keys he held in his hand, but the demons flew off before
friend, for example.7 But in these late seventh-century materials, the tears he could strike.75
are particularly noisy and abundant.
These sources also portray some blatantly "political" emotions. Thus, EMOTIONAL INTERACTION
when Leudegar was appointed bishop of Autun, "at his coming all the ene- Nevertheless, it is wrong to isolate these "political" uses of emotions from
mies of his church and city were terrified [territi sunt], as were those who their less spectacular-more private and intimate-communicative and in-
continually fought one another with hatreds [odiis] and murders .... For teractive functions. For, to return to psychological theory for a moment,
those whom preaching had failed to lead to peace were now constrained by emotions are not just about "appraisals of things affecting me" but about
tl1e terror [terror] of [his] justice?'71 The passage is reminiscent of the por- appraisals tl1at both signal and lead to change. Their expression transforms
trayal in the Chronicle of Fredegar, written (probably) a generation earlier, our relations with ourselves and others. 76 This, I think, is the basis for tl1e
of Dagobert's royal entry into Burgundy: "the coming of Dagobert struck observation (which is, however, wrongly globalized to the entire Middle
the bishops and magnates with such great fear [timore] -not to mention the Ages) that certain public emotions had well-understood meanings. The ma-
terials from late seventh-century Francia exploit this communicative and in-
66. On the gift of tears, see Piroska Nagy, Le don des larmes au Moyen 4ge. Un instrument
spirituel en quete d'institution (V'-XIII' siecle) (Paris, 2ooo ).
72. Fredegar, Chronicle sS, ed. Wallace-Hadrill, p. 48: "Tanta timore ponteficibus et pro-
67. Vita Wandregiseli 8, p. r6: "Ibi se jejuniis et vigiliis adfligebat, cotidiae gemin1s, cotidiae cerebus in regnum Burgundiae consistentibus seo et citeris leudibus advenrus Dagoberti
lacrimas . . ?' concusserat ut a cunctis esset mirandum; pauperibus justitiam habentibus gaudium vehe-
68. Vita Balthildis n, pp. 496-97: "Et hoc torum cum gaudio ac leto perficiebat animo.... menter inrogaverat?'
Insistebatque assidue orationi devota cumlacrimis?' 73 See the introduction at notes 4r-sr.
69. Passio Praejeeti n, p. 232: "Lacrimarum inbrem profundens, Dei Sabaoth proclamat pre- 74. Vita Sadalbellfae ro, p. ss: "Meruens autem praefarus Gundoinus, ne ob filiam iram
ces?'
regis saevitiamque incurreret .. ?'
76. See chap. 3, note 84.
7s. Visio Barontii r2, p. 387: "Tunc sancrus Pett-us in ira contra eos commorus, eis bis terque
7I. Passio Leudegarii 2, pp. 284-Ss: "ita in advenrum eius territi sunt omnes ecclesiae vel dicere coepit: 'Recedite, spirirus nequam; recedite, inimici Dei eique semper contrarii, dimit-
mbes illius adversarii, necnon et hii qui inter se odiis et homicidiis incessanter certabant , .. tite ilium!'" An illustration of the keys qua weapon is fearured in several manuscripts.
quia quos praedicatio ad concordiam non adduxerat, justitiae terror cogebat?' 76. This is argued most forcefully in Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling, pp. roo-ro7.

I78 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Reveling in Rancor { I79
teractive potential in ways both old and new. We have already seen that Gre- ,,
g~ry the Great gave the pasta~ the right.' authority, and capacity to feel and malcing a circuit of the walls with saints' relics, clinging to the
With- and transform the emotwns of-111S flock. Rather differently G at each and every entryway, he prayed to the Lord with tears [cum
, re- that He would not allow the people entrusted to him to be cap-
gory ofTours and Fortunatus saw family feeling and the interactions that
they engendered-whether loving or (in dysfunctional fan1ilies) hating-as : d"79 But this sort of conversion was very rare, and in the Visio Baronti,
rure . h "Wh .
the key elements of emotional life. (By contrast, the Neustrian courtiers :' h'ch was written as a cautionary tale for monks, we see w y: o IS
at t ~se
1.wi 'dth h
. there, I ask, dearest brothers [karissimi] with so ironclad a mm
around Clothar II and Dagobert saw deference rather tl1an emotional ex-
pression as the fmmdation of human interaction.) :; announced punishments [that Barontus has seen in hell] would not ternfY
These are all ways to understand when and why people have emotions. >. [terreant] him? ... But many do not believe, because the love [amor] of the
In the case of Gregory the Great, in addition to the cogitations of the mind wrld and earthly things delights [delectatJ them more than the love . [amor].
80
of God and the society of angels and the saints?' Thus bad em~tlons get m
sent by the Devil, there was a kind of emotional vibration that one person
picked up from another, leading (in the most favorable instances) to con- the way of good ones, and people do not change course. Consid~r ~ude-
version. In the late seventh-century materials that we are discussing here, , gar's unsuccessful intervention with ~e drunken .and angry Childenc ~I:
however, there is rather little emotional "echoing." Although Queen ''Undaunted he went to the irate lung [r~em tratum] and asked with
Balthild "sorrowed with the sorrowful ... and rejoiced witl1 the joyful" soothing wo~ds [verbis mitibus] why he had not come before vi?ils and per-
(dolebat enim cum dolentibus . .. et cum gaudentibus gaudebat), her biogra- sisted full of anger [ira] in the solemnity of such a ho1~ I_Ught [bef~re
pher did not suggest that some people could calibrate their emotions to lead Easter]. The other, while distressed [turbatus] by Leudegar s I~effable. ~Is-
77 dam, could answer only by saying said that he held Leudegar m suspicion
others to salvation. In the case of Gregory of Tours and Fortunatus, fam-
ily feeling was a substrate on which otl1er emotions were founded. In the for a certain reason?' 81
late seventh century this sensibility had almost disappeared, though, to be But if people were hard to convert to virtuous feelings, they were, by
sure, "[Lady Balthild] loved her sister [nuns] with the most pious affection contr~st, easy targets for those who urged on ~em anger, .fear, and en:'f.
[affectu dilitfebat], as if they were her own daughters?'78 Mainly, however- Because the young Praejectus was preferred by his patron, Bishop Genesms
and the emphasis was new in the late seventh centuiy, tl10ugh the idea was
certainly present in Cassian and Gregory the Great-emotions were under-
stood to be aroused or transformed by the manipulation and persuasion of 79. rassw
n L eudec:gan; 22 , pp 303-4 "Terrenus homo si talem a Deo. acceperit potestatem,

external events. persequatur, conprehendat, praedit, incendat, i1~terfitiat: haec n~ll~tenus possu~ms dech-
nantes effugire. Et si hie tradimur de rebus transitoriis ad ~isci~Imam,, non ~sperem~s,
Sometimes virtuous emotions were stirred, consonant with tl1e values of immo potius gaudeamus in futuro de venia. Munianms ergo Vlr~nbus an1mam Sim~l et CIV-
the authors. When his enemies were camped outside his city, Leudegar's bi- itatis custodiam, ne inveniant utrique hostes aditum, per quod mferre possunt ~enculu~.
ographer showed him mobilizing his clergy and townspeople witl1 high- Commovens igitur universum urbis illius populum, cum triduano jejuni~, cur~ s1gno cruc1s
flown sentiments: "'An earthly man:" he preached. "'should he receive such et reliquias sanctorum murorum circumiens ambitum, per singulos etemm ad1tos po~tarum
power from God, is liable to persecute; seize, loot, burn, and kill: we cannot terrae adherens Dominum praecabatur cum lacrimis, ut si ilium vocabat ad pass10nem,
escape these things by turning away. And if here we are handed over to pun- plebem sibi creditam non permitterit captivari, et ita praes~a~~ est evenisse?'
so. Visio Baronti 20 , p. 393: "Quisnam ille est, fratres kanssimi, rogo, tam ferream mente~
ishment in transitory matters, let us not despair [disperemusJ but rather re-
habet, quem non terreant ista denuntiata supplicia? ... Sed ideo multi no~1 cred~t, qma
joice (gaudeamus] in the pardon to come? ... And so, rousing [commovensJ
plus eos delectat amor saeculi et quomoda terrena, quam delectat amor De1 et societas an-
the whole population of this city, with a three-day fast, with tl1e sign of tl1e
gelorum adque sanctorum?' . ,.
Sr. Passio Leudegarii ro, p. 2 93: "intrepidus adiit regem iratum eumque verbis nu~1bus re~
n. Vita Balthildis n, p. 497. UISIV!t cur ante vigilias non venisset, vel in tam sacrae noctis sollenmia repletus 1ra persis-
, 6. Ibid., p. 496: "Ipsa vero piissimo affectu diligebat sorores ut proprias filias." teret.~am dum illius ineffabili sapientiae aliud turbatus non valuisset respondere, suspectum
se eum quadam de causa dixit habere?'

r8o } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


Rveling in Raneor { r8r
of Clermont, other clerics, competing for the same favors, were envious.
ample, when he or his demons introduced a vice into the human heart, and
"And as it is the custom that clerics denigrate the knowledge of many be-
he felt a certain anxiety and sadness (quandam anxietatem et tristitiam) when
cause they cannot fill their own storehouses [with wisdom], they desired to
struggling in vain with virtuous souls. 86 Sorrow (dolor) and distress (confU-
pour out evil hatreds [odia maligna] on others endowed with wisdom.
sio) followed upon his defeat. 87
Therefore the poison of the clerics aroused envy [invidiam] against Praejec-
While the elites of the late seventh century drew little inspiration from
tus in a certain Martin:' the cantor who sounded the tones of the chants.
the asceticism of the Desert Fathers, they did make use of some elements of
This Martin forced the boy to sing a particularly difficult tune, a challenge
their writings. Certainly these were readily available. Cassian's Conferences)
that Praejectus met only with the intercession of a saint.82 Note that the
in particular, was recommended reading in the Rule of St. Benedict and
envy did not originally come from Martin himself; it was the poisonous
other monastic rules. 88 But, as we have seen with the vocabulary of emo-
fruit of human suggestion.
tions, different groups drew on traditions variously and for their own pur-
But this is a singular example. The prime mover to rancorous emotion in
poses. While Gregory the Great explained how Job managed to be virtuous
these late seventh-century materials was not human at all: it was the Devil.
despite the "bad thoughts" of the Devil, the writers of the late seventh cen-
Evil thoughts did not come from within; they were roused up by a Devil
tury focused on the Devil as a key actor in a complex process of emotional
who knew how to manipulate people with finesse and sophistication.
incitement.89 Consider tl1e Devil's role in tl1eMarryrdom ofLeudegar:
In this regard the emotional community of the late seventh-century elite
was building upon older notions of the Devil's role and personality. Always But because malice [malitia] is always opposed to good will, and the an-
potentially the instigator of bad deeds, the Devil and his minions (the cient serpent, who is envious [invidus ], always finds those tl1rough
demons) were, in the writings of the Desert Fathers, closely linked to the whom he may sow temptation, some high-ranking men, ignorant of
emotions. For Evagrius, they were equivalent to the prickings and tinglings spiritual tl1ings but rather holding secular power, seeing Leudegar to be
of evil thoughts: there was a "demon" of vainglory and a "demon" of forni- the inflexible pinnacle of justice, began to twist with spiteful envy [invido
cation, for example. 83 Cassian, while sometimes internalizing the sources of livore J and determined, if possible, to get in the way of his progress. Now
vice, noted that Adam would not have been tempted by the emotion (passio) at that time the majordomo (as we call him) was Ebroin; he ruled the
of fornication had he not been baited by the Devil. 84 At the same time, the palace under King Clothar, for the queen ... was now living in the mon-
Devil himself was an emotional being in Cassian's world. In his seventh and astery which she had prepared for herself beforehand. The aforemen-
eighth Conferences) both devoted to demonology, Cassian associated him tioned envious men [invidi] went to Ebroin and aroused his heart to fury
with two emotional vices above all: pride (superbia) and envy (invidia).85 [fUrore] against the man of God. 90
But the Devil also had feelings which, in other people and under other cir-
cumstances, might be considered positive: he rejoiced (gaudet), for ex- 86. Ibid., 7.17, p. 196; 7.21, p. 198.
87. Ibid., 7-21, p. 198.
88. Adalbert de Vogtie, "Les mentions des oeuvres de Cassien chez Benolt et ses contem-
82. Passio Praejecti 4, p. 228: "Et ut mos est clerum multorum scientiam praegravare, quod
porains;' StudiaMonastica 20 (1978): 275-85.
in suas non valent replere cellas, ceteros sapientie datos oclia maligna desiderant perfundere.
89. The exceptions are a "certain old man" in the Vita Wandregiseli 6, pp. 15-16, who was at-
Unde Martinum quendam, qui cantilene vocis pro decorem sanctarum ecclesiarum in multi-
tacked by the envious (invidiosns) devil but who managed to resist, and, more ambiguously,
smoclis meditationibus insonantem, concitat clericorum venena in Prejecti invicliam, prefun-
Gertrude in the Vita Geretrudis 2, p. 456, who "non parvam sustinuit temptationem" (sus-
dunt in aure, ut fatiat puerum inter ceteros meclitum cuiusdam soni, unde ipse inscius erat,
tained not a few temptations) of the Devil. For Gregory the Great, see chap. 2.
vix tandem, ut ita dicam, puncta ore meditum personasse, quem sui aemuli longo iam evo
90. Passio Leudegarii 3-4, p. 286: "Sed quia bona voluntate semper discordat malitia et an-
sonitum vocibus decantabant?'
tiquus serpens invidus semper invenit, per quos scandalum seminet, aliquid honorati spiri-
83. See chap. 1, note 49.
talia nescientes, set potius potentiam secularem timentes [recte? tenentes], videntes hunc
84. Cassian, Conlationes s.6, CSEL 13:125.
virum inflexibilem per justitiae culmen existere, invido coeperunt livore torquere et statuunt,
Ss. Ibid., s.ro, p. 226.
si sit aditus eius obviare profectibus. Erat enim in illis temporibus Ebroinus, ut clicimus, ma-

182 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


Reveling in Rancor { 183
Thus working by proxy, not at all automatically but by divining the interests he sees someone very carefully obeying the commandments of God?'95 At
of various groups, the Devil orchestrated an emotional transformatio Balthild's tomb, a raging demon was "terrified by divine fear" (conterritus di-
n.
First, the "ancient serpent" incited a faction of the Neustrian magnates to vino pavore). Turning stiff (obriguit) and falling silent (conticuit), he fled the
envy the privileges and power of Leudegar, Queen Balthild's appointee. body of the man he had possessed.96 Envy, anger, grief, fear: Ekman and
With the queen's retirement, which perhaps they engineered, they saw their Friesen's modern list of "universal emotions" differs little from the Devil's
opportunity. 91 But the key to their power was Ebroin, mayor of the palace emotional capacity in the late seventh century. 97
who. con~olled access to the king. And thus they worked on his feelings:
rousmg htm to anger. Although the emotions are simple and straightfor- FEELING BEINGS
ward, the ways in which they are elicited are not. There is an implicit ac- Projecting emotions onto the Devil may seem, from a modern point of
knowledgment here of the cognitive view of emotions as assessments made view, an abnegation of self-knowledge. In fact, to the contrary, it allowed
on the basis of one's interests. late seventh-century authors the latitude to explore inner psychologies more
M~st stril~n~ in ~1~se materials are the feelings of the demons, rivaling fully than we have seen hitherto and even to expand the semantic field of
those m Casstan s wntmgs. Indeed, the fact that the Vision ofBarontus stars one word, JUror, whose meaning had hitherto been circumscribed by rigid
two demons tells us that they were now "personalities?' Envy was, to be moral categories. In the first half of the seventh century the Neustrian :,'
sure, their primary emotion. We have seen how it was first the "envious" courtiers had used the term to mean anger out of control. Thus in Jonas's
Devil who stirred up the magnates who would, in turn, move Ebroin's heart Life of]ohn of.Riome a servant named Clarus, incensed by a letter, turned in
to fury. 92 Another example is in the Life ofWandregisil, where the Devil felt fury (furore), spat on the letter, and, cursing iferocia redens responsa), kicked
"the greatest envy" (maximam invidiam) when he saw God call a saintly old out (exprevit) the letter carrier.98 Furor meant much the same thing in the
man to eternallife. 93 But envy was not the whole story. Anger came next: passage from the Martyrdom ofLeudegar quoted above, where envious men
one of the demons in Barontus's vision gave him a kick and, "full of anger" incited Ebroin to fury, though, unlike Clarus, Ebroin knew how to bide his
(iracundia), declared: "'I had you in my power once already and hurt you time. But in another late seventh-century source, the Life of Gertrude, the
badly; now you will be tormented forever in hell? " 94 And rancor was only word suddenly was allowed new, expanded, and virtuous meaning. Con-
the beginning. Listen to Wandregisil speaking to his monlcs and parsing the fronted with a suitor after she had pledged herself to Christ, Gertrude, "as if
emotions of the Devil: " [Act virtuously so thatJ the devil may fall low and filled with fury [fUrore], rejected him with an oath?'99 Here, as Catherine
lament [lugeat], because he has the greatest grief [maximam meroremJ when Peyroux has shown, fury had come to mean righteous anger.l 00 Nor did tl1e
quasi ("as if") that precededJuror signifY that the author hesitated to use the
jordomus, qui sub rege Chlothario tunc regebat palatium; nam regina ... iam in monaste-
word. Quasi seems to have simply been a rhetorical tic; the same author
rio, quod sibi antea praeparaverat, resedebat. Praeterea memorati invidi adeunt Ebroinum et used it for the emotion of fear, whose meaning was entirely traditional:
contra Dei virum eius in furore suscitant animum?' For the emendation of timentes to Gertrude, "as if utterly terrified by fear" (quasi pavore perterrita), announced
tenentes, seeLateMerovingian France, ed. and trans. Fouracre and Gerberding, p. 220 n. 98.
9I. The Vita Balthildis ro, p. 495, admits that a faction of nobles "counseled" Balthild to re- 95. Vita Wandregiseli IS, p. 21: "diabulus ut decidat et lugeat, quia maximam merorem
tire from the court: "sed ipsa donma Dei voluntatem considerans, ut hoc non tarn eorum habet, quando quemquam viderit pmmtissimum a mandatis Dei custodiendum?'
consilium, quam Dei fuisset dispensatio" (but that lady considered it the will of God that it 96. Vita Balthildis I7, p. sos: "conterritusque divino pavore, ilico sevissimus demon obri-
had been not so much their counsel as the dispensation of God). guit atque conticuit?'
92. See note 90 above.
97. For Ekman and Friesen, see chap. I, note 82.
93 The same phrase occurs twice: Vita Wandregiseli 6 and I9, pp. I6, 23. Another example 98. Jonas, Vita Johannis ro, p. sn: "Cumque Clams nomen audisset, in furore versus, beati
is in the Vita Geretrudis 2, p. 455, where the "enemy of the human race" is "envious" (invidus) viri epistolam salibo inlitam abjecit, et ferocia redens responsa, gerolum exprevit?'
of good works. 99. Vita Geretrudis I, p. 454: "at ilia quasi furore repleta, respuit ilium cum juramenta?'
94. Visio Baronti 4, p. 38I: "te habui in potestatem et nocui valde, nunc autem in infernum IOO. Catherine Peyroux, "Gertrude's foror: Reading Anger in an Early Medieval Saint's
cruciabis perpetualiter?' Lift," in Angers Past, ed. Rosenwein, chap. 2.

I84 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Reveling in Rancor { I85
that she had seen a flaming sphere. 101 With the Devil absorbing and con- . sources. Queen Balthild, who shows no emotion while at court (at least, not
taining the evil side of things, a word such as forotj which formerly had been . in the hands of her biographer), becomes a more passionate being in her
linked to sin, could now become virtuous if dissociated from him.
monastery. There, as we have seen, "she loved [diligebat] her sisters with the
Moreover, with the Devil incarnating evil, even bad men gained psycho- most pious affection [affictu ], as if they were her own daughters:' 109 and she
logical complexity. Ebroin is the best example. When we first meet him he entered into the emotional lives of others by mirroring their feelings. She
is, as we have seen, burning with fury ifuror) against Leudegar. But that is visited the sick, "sorrowing [dolebat] with the sorrowful [dolentibus]
not all. He is also "fired up with the torch of desire" (cupiditatis face succen- through her zeal for charity [caritatis]; and she rejoiced [gaudebat] with the
sus) for money and power. 102 Fearing (de metu) Leudegar and his faction, he joyful [gaudentibus J; and for the healthy ones [or, possibly, the slaves], she
begins an initial round of persecutions. 103 When Clothar Ill dies, Ebroin, often humbly asked the lady abbess that they might be consoled?' 110
"puffed up by the spirit of pride" (superbiae spiritu tumidus), strikes fear in
turn into the hearts of the nobles by refusing to call them together.I04 The VARIETIES OF EMOTIONAL LIFE
ploy backfires, however, because the nobles, including Leudegar's faction, Thus far I have discussed these materials as if they constituted the products
call in King Childeric and exile Ebroin to Luxeuil. Soon, however, Leude- ' .
of one emotional community. Certainly there is much to recommend t111S
gar has a falling out with Childeric, and he too is banished to Luxeuil. With procedure. All were about members of an increasingly homogeneous elite,
both men out of favor and inhabiting the same monastery, Ebroin feigns written by members of that elite for other members' delectation. They use~
(simulans) friendship with Leudegar. 105 Presumably he still "really" feels en- a similar emotional vocabulary, and they expressed the same presupposi-
mity, but short-term goals now take precedence when it comes to emotional tions about t11e nature and use of emotions.
expression. Soon the faction loyal to Childeric is disillusioned and kills the Nevertheless, one of them-tl1e Life of Sadalbe'QJa-seems a bit odd.
Icing. Now Ebroin pretends (similans) to be the fidelis-the faithful adher- Above all, it uses- uniquely within this set of materials, and with some fre-
ent-ofTheuderic, whom, indeed, he had once supported,l06 Once rein-
quency-the word anxius (anxious). Sadalberga was anxious (anxi.a~ when
stated as mayor under Theuderic, he feigns sorrow (similans se dolere) about she had no children and so she prayed at the tomb of St. Reimgms for
Childeric's death as a cover to persecute those he hates (odisset)J07 And so them,lll And "that which she had petitioned for faithfully and anxiously
on. He is not far from an Iago in emotional range.
[anxie Jwas given to her?'ll2 Later in the story, nuns at Sadalberga's monas-
Similarly, the men who conspire against Ebroin have complicated feel- tery were anxious (anxiae) because they could not d~ their . d tas.1c. 113
. assigne
ings. They fear him (timoris causa); their hearts are touched by grief (dolore) (Happily, a miracle solved the problem.) The word IS thus used tl1ree times
as they see him despoil them of their wealth; they are roused against him in this short text; only amor equals its frequency, and caritas exceeds it by
108
(commoti). And there are other complex beings in some of the other
just one other use. But that too is strange. We have seen that in theMarryr-
dom of Leudegatj a representative work for the emotional community we
IOI. Vita Geretrudis 4, p. 458.
102. Passio Leudegarii 4, p. 286.
109 . Vita Balthildis n, p. 496: "Ipsa vero piissimo affectu diligebat sorores ut proprias fil-
103. Ibid., p. 287. It is not entirely clear whose fear the phrase "de metu" refers to, but
ias."
Fouracre and Gerberding, Late Merovingian France, p. 221 n. 104, point out that elsewhere
no. Ibid., p. 497: "Dolebat enim cum dolentibus per studium caritatis et cum gaudentibus
(Passio LeudfiJarii 28, p. 309) Ebroin's persecutions are clearly the result of his own fear.
gaudebat et pro sanis, ut consolarenmr, damna abbatissa humiliter sepius suggerebat?' M~st
104. Passio LeudfiJarii 5, p. 287= "Ideo magis coeperunt metuere" (therefore they began to
be more fearful). manuscripts read sanis (for the healthy), but one reads tribulatis (for the troubled), whrle
Kmsch himself suggests servis (for the slaves) or saniosis (for the healthier ones). Fouracre and
105. Ibid., 13, p. 296: "Ebroinus ... simulatam gerens concordiam" (Ebroin, manifesting
simulated harmony). Gerberding, Late Merovingian France, p. 127 n. 198, choose servis. On the monastery as a sub-
stimte family in hagiography, see Padberg, Heilige und Familie, esp. 88-89, 121-22, 147-50.
I06. Ibid., 16, p. 298.
nr. Vita SadalbellJae n, p. 55, where she is characterized as "christianissima femina anxia?'
107. Ibid., 29, p. 310.
n 2 . Ibid.: "hoc quod fideliter et anxie petierat a Domino est ei collanun?'
ro8. Ibid., 4, pp. 286-87.
II3. Ibid., 21, p. 62.
186 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Rcveling in Rancor { 187
have been exploring, words of love were quite infrequent. Conversely, the story and tells us that Waldebert, also a disciple of Columbanus and abbot
words that are most frequent in the hands of the Leudegar author, fear and of Luxeuil after Eustasius, was Sadalberga's advisor when she decided to
ranco~, are of little i~port~ce in the Life of Sadalbet;ga. Anger comes up found a monastery, which she first did near Langres.ll 8 This was in the
once, m the form of tra regts) the anger of the Icing; fear occurs once as well, vicinity ofReome, which was already in Jonas's day a "Columbanian" mon-
as pavor in response to the work of the DeviJ.ll4 Finally, although there is a astery, reformed by Luxeuil.ll9 There may thus have been a Luxeuil/Langres
long discussion of the Devil and his evil doings in chapters 15 and 16 of the emotional community whose norms, always evolving, may nevertheless be
Life ofSadalbet;ga) not once does he betray an emotion, nor is he said to mo- glimpsed Uust barely) as they were interpreted by Jonas in 559-when he
tivate people to feel in any particular way.
visited Reo me and wrote the Life ofJohn- and by Sadalberga's anonymous
Until recently, the Life of Sadalbet;ga was considered a Carolingian con- hagiographer circa 68o when he wrote at the request ofSadalberga's daugh-
fection. Were Hummer's recent defense of its seventh-century authorship ter.
not so convincing, it would be convenient to drop it from our present
dossier. But its late seventh-century authorship is now quite certain. What, Drawing on a vast repertory of emotion words, ideas, and gestures, the
then, explains its anomalous understanding and expression of emotions? Is writers of the late seventh century turned the factional fighting of the previ-
it the visible tip of an otherwise hidden emotional community-or, rather, ous decades into martyr stories about passionate men and women. Emo-
subcommunity, since the Life ofSadalbet;ga is, as we have seen, in some ways tions were key to their conception of the past: the elites of late seventh-
very much part of the late seventh-century mainstream?
century Francia explainecl' recent history by seeing everywhere rancorous
I think that this may be so. I shall also very tentatively suggest that we and envious but also pa~sionate and loving feelings. Kings and queens
may lmow something, though not much, about this emotional community mourned the death of a saint; bishops offered exemptions to monasteries to
already. There are some resemblances between the emotional vocabulary counteract their own greed; envious men, fired up by the Devil, carried out
and sensibility of the Life of Sadalbet;ga and Jonas's Life ofJohn of Rioml. nefarious deeds. The turmoil of the "age ofEbroin"-about 66o to 68o-no
Bruno Krusch, the editor of the Life ofSadalbet;ga) long ago noted the corre- doubt lies behind the emotional styles of the later period. 120 But it is equally
spondences therein to Jonas's Life ofColumbanus. But Krusch was not look- likely that the emotional styles of the elite played a role both in fostering the
ing at the expression of emotion. The Life ofJohn and the Life of Sadalbet;ga political events and in shaping our conception of them. I shall consider both
share the free use of anxius) us the privileging of loving words, and the of these points more fully in the final part of my concluding chapter.
avoidance of rancorous emotions.ll6
It is just possible that in the Life of Sadalbet;ga we have the traces of a n8. Vita Sadalbet;JJa& 4 and r2, pp. 53, 56-57.
community in Alsace that was touched in its own way by Columbanus or, n9. See Prinz, Friihes Miinchtum, p. 297.
more precisely, his disciples. Sadalberga is mentioned in Jonas's Life of 120. See Paul Fouracre, "Merovingian History and Merovingian Hagiography;' Past and
Columbanus: as a young girl, her blindness was cured by Eustasius, Colum- Present, no. 127 (1990): 35-36.
banus's follower and abbot of LuxeJJil. 117 The Life of Sadalbet;ga repeats the

II4. For ira regis, ibid., ro, p. ss; for pavot; ibid., rs, p. ss.
ns. Compare the Vita Sadalbet;JJae, with three uses of an anxiety word, to the Vita ]ohannis,
with four uses. The former is about 280 lines; the latter 315, so the frequency is roughly com-
parable.
II6. In the Vita Sadalbet;JJae, the emotion words are affictus, amot; anxius, caritas, diligo, ira,
metuo, ovo, pavot; and spem, with dulceda and hilaris as emotion markers. In the Vita ]ohannes
they are affictus, amot; anxius, ardat; desiderium, diligo, furot; gaudium, l(a)etus, metus,
m(a)estus, ovo, pavefactus (pavor), and timot; with emotion markersgemo and hilaris.
II7. Jonas, Vita Columbani 8, p. 122.

r88 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages


Rcveling in Rancor { r89
While emotions may be expressed more or less dramatically, they are never
pure and unmediated drives or energies. They are always mediated because
they are "upheavals of thoughts"-as Nussbaum has put it-that involve
judgments about whether something is good or bad for us. These assess-
ments depend, in turn, upon our values, goals, and presuppositions-prod-
ucts of our society, community, and individual experience, mediators all.
Society, community, and individual experience are always changing. This
book challenges the idea that we may speak of any one emotional stance;
structure, or set of norms as characteristic of the "Middle Ages?' It insists
that the history of emotions must be traced in relatively small increments of
transformation and change. In this final chapter I wish to sum up the argu-
ment of this book. I shall then problematize the methods that I have used to
read the sources and query what, exactly, they can tell us about emotions.
Finally, I shall suggest a theory of how and why emotional norms change
and what makes them important.

THE ARGUMENT
The capacious English word "emotions" elides many differences between
what English spealcers once called-with fairly clear distinctions- appetites,
passions, affections, and sentiments. While the ancient world also had many
words for what we call emotions, the Stoics in rejecting them dubbed the
whole lot as pathe. This was accepted by Cicero in the first century B. C. E.,
who translated the Greek word by the Latin perturbationes and then listed
some of the terms that belonged in the category. His inventory, which, as he
himself noted, was open-ended, is strikingly close to modern lists of emo-
tions. That fact-and the fact that different groups emphasized and/or ig-
nored various words on this and similar lists-makes it possible to begin to
write a history of the emotions, or, more precisely, of the perturbationes)
motus animi) passiones) affectus) and so on which, at least until the thirteenth
century, were overlapping if not precisely synonymous categories of feel-
ing.!

r. On d1e precision that began in the twelfth century and was quite marked in me iliir-
teenth, see Sciuto, "Le passioni:' and Peter King, "Aquinas on the Passions:' in Aquinas's
Most of this book concerns a relatively short period, just over a century,
new emotional community came to the fore, that of a pan-Franlcish elite. It
f~om the papacy of Grego:r .the Great (590-604) to about 700. The inscrip- seethed with passions, both positive and negative. The new sensibility cele-
tiOns for the dead commtsstoned by mourners at Trier, Vienne, and Cler- brated public displays of emotion, attributed complex sentiments to the
mont cover a slightly longer period because they start earlier. They intro-
devil, made much of "feigned" feelings, and appreciated tl1e role of emo-
duce three emotional communities: the epitaphs of each place are different
tions in interpersonal interactions.
enough from one anotl1er to suggest that local traditions had a good deal of
say in how and which emotions would be expressed or not expressed. The
READING THE SOURCES
disparate norms at Trier, Vienne, and Clermont, uniformly Christian, were
A history of emotions should be about how people felt. Yet this book spealcs
overlapping, and no doubt any mobile individual could have bridged them;
of norms, codes, and modes of expression rather than feelings. Is it, tl1en, a
nevertheless they were recognizably distinct.
history of emotions? The answer requires first a discussion of what we can
The reaction to death's toll is only a small part of the life of any commu-
know from our sources.
nity. To get at the norms for all-or more-facets of life, it is necessary to
The sources tell us at least what people thought other people would like
turn to fuller sources. Gregory the Great and Gregory ofTours provide our
to hear (or expected to hear). Most do not pretend to be expressions of
first examples of emotional communities "in the round.'' Contemporaries,
emotion; they are accmmts or descriptions-imagined and otherwise-
they lived far from one another, the first in Italy, the second in Gaul. Shar-
about human behavior, and that includes the ways in which emotions must
ing in the by then widespread assumptions of Catholic Christianity- de-
be (and to some degree were) expressed. A few sources are exceptional. Epi-
meaning the love of earthly things, fearing God, and valorizing the joys of
taphs and letters reveal-in however commonplace a fashion-the feelin~s
heaven-tl1ey nevertheless navigated these principles very differently when
(or simulated feelings) of tl1ose who composed them. Then, too, there ~s
they conceived of and expressed emotions, whether speaking of themselves
the occasional flash of autobiography: Gregory the Great tells us about hts
or others. Gregory the Great distrusted emotions, but he thought that they
experience with stomach pangs; Gregory of Tours narrates his cure at the
were "useful" as hooks for lifting sinners to virtue when properly man-
tomb of St. Illidius; Jonas takes us on an abortive trip to see his mother.
aged- by the saints and rectors of the church. In Gaul around the same
Yet even these less oblique sources are problematic, though not because
time, however, Gregory ofTours and his friend Fortunatus found comfort
the sentiments that they express are formulaic. As I noted in the introduc-
in family feeling, an idiom and metaphor that suffused the way they under-
tion, commonplaces are socially true even if they may not be individually
stood and expressed emotions of every sort.
sincere. To look at the matter in anotl1er way, they are emotives: a first draft.
The overturning of Austrasian hegemony at the beginning of the seventh
That they exist at all is significant. The real problem in these sources is to
century brought an end to the ascendancy of the emotive style typified by
evaluate the emotions properly. Is it right to discuss in the same way, as I do
Fortunatus and Gregory of Tours. A new emotional sensibility came to the
in this book, a word of affection, such as carissimus (dearest); a metaphorical
fore at the court of Clothar II and his progeny. It was wary of passion, teth-
use of an emotion word, such as Tartarus furens (hell raging); and an out-
ered to restraint and deference. Mothers, whose emotional expression was
right declaration of emotion, such as Desiderius's to Aspasia: "Moved by
rather warmer (perhaps a residue of the old emphasis on family feeling?),
your tears .. .''? I once thought of eliminating metaphors on the gro~nds
were presented as temptresses threatening the religious life. Negative emo-
that they are purely literary devices. But what makes them more or less liter-
tions such as envy, hatred, and greed were largely unmentioned; the empha-
ary than terms of endearment? Doesn't the metaphor gain its force precisely
sis was on love, joy, and fear of God. This was surely in part a by-product of
because of its use of an emotion word? "Hell raging" is not just a metaphor;
the Icing and courtiers' engagement in the monasticism of St. Columbanus.
it also reveals a sensibility that appreciates the power of fury. 2
The late seventl1 century saw an end to this set of emotional norms. A
Would it not be best-as I do not do-to "map" emotion words in ac-

Moral Theory: Essays in Honor of Norman Kretzmann, ed. Scott MacDonald and Eleonore
2. However, the difficulties in interpreting the metaphors of cultures long past is well de-
Stump (Ithaca, N.Y., I999), pp. ror-32.
scribed in Pelliccia,Mind, Body, and Speech, pp. 32-39.
192 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Conclusion { I93
cordance with whether they are "good" (caritas> for example) or "bad" the text says nothing about outrage or honor. I have preferred to assume
(juror, for example)? This is the sort of thing that Thomas Dixon wishes to that if an emotion word does not appear, the silence itself is significant. Sim-
do with Augustine, in order to argue that even in the early Middle Ages ilarly, if an emotion word appears frequently, I assume it has particular im-
peo~le made .a clear distinction between affections (which were Godly) and portance to the writer. This cannot be entirely wrong, though I expect and
passwns ~whiCh were not). 3 However, while this sort of understanding of hope that other scholars of emotions will refme the method.
th~ e~otwns may fit Patristic definitions and scholastic arguments, it is This sort of reading allows poems to be assessed together with charters,
qmte mapplicable to local practice, when even Juror, as we have seen in the narratives with saints' lives. A whole tradition of literary studies would say
case ofGertrude, could have godly meaning, and caritas could.signif)r, as in that this is wrong, tl1at placing Fortunatus's poems alongside Gregory of
~e ~ands ofBaudonivia, worldly love (caritatem mundialem) ripe for repu- Tours's Histories is a fundamental misunderstanding of genre. I quite agree.
dtatwn. But by considering these writings as social products, tl1eir lowest common
The examples ofJuror and caritas show that emotions cannot be decon- denominator, I am. able to get at what is normative about tl1eir emotional
textualized; they come in clusters of words. Their meaning has everything expression. I do not deny the soundness of many other sorts of readings.
to do with the phrases around them and the way that those phrases were But I maintain that this one, too, has validity, especially if it is done with
talcen (ironically, metaphorically, literally) both by the writer and his or her some sensitivity to literary artifice and genre. It is essential, for example, to
audience. Additionally, like the colors of a palette, emotions blend; that is pay attention to Gregory of Tours's satirical intent in order not to be de-
why histor~~s c~ speak o~ a "romantic era" or an "age of anxiety:' referring ceived by his use of dulcedo. Nevertheless, it is useful to recall that satire
to a s!nergtsttc piCture. 4 It ts necessary for the historian to see not only what works only when it is playing with social mores, and those mores are pre-
emotwn words were used by an emotional commtmity, but also to under- cisely the point of this book.
stand how they worked together and within a context. But doesn't genre determine emotional expression? It is not for nothing
From time to time I have counted emotion words, suggesting that fre- that Aristotle chose the topic of rhetoric as the place to discuss emotions.
quency is of some importance. Is this justified? Admittedly, the method is Rules of rhetoric and tl1eir mastery allowed medieval writers to heap praise
rough-and-ready. But at least it allows us to check our assumptions, both on someone one day, excoriate him or her the next.7 Robert Levin, a mod-
those ~at infer emotions where they are not and those that suppose the ern composer, is able to write a convincing new ending for Mozart's Re-
predommance of particular emotions where the words themselves do not quiem without becoming a member of Mozart's world. 8 While not denying
warrant it. Consider a passage from Gregory of Tours: "Waddo ... com- the validity of these observations, one might also point out that Aristotle
plained that his horses had been taken by the son-in-law ofBeretrudis and had a particular-a Greek-notion of emotions; that invective and praise,
he ~ecided to go to one of the villas she had left to her daughter ... sa~ing, however different in intent, both constitute aspects of an emotional commu-
'Thts man . . took my horses and I shall take his villa.' "5 In her discussion nity; and that Mozart, as currently played, is part of our world.
of .this gassage, Nira Pancer assumes emotion. "Outraged [outrage]:' she Moreover, it should be clear from this book that genres are flexible. Fu-
wntes, by the theft of horses perpetrated by the son-in-law of Beretrudis, nerary inscriptions, while formulaic, were by no means uniform across
Waddo considered it a point of honor to react.''6 Pancer may be right. But Gaul. Literary genres, such as letters and saints' Lives could be tweaked.
Even charters, perhaps the most prone to boilerplate, nevertheless could
add a word of affection here, a word of terror there. It is by just such tiny
3 Dixon, From Passions to Emotions; chap. 2.
4. Some psychologists take seriously the likeness of emotions to colors. See Plutchik
"Emotions;' pp. 204-5, and the survey in Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling; chap. r. ' 7. See Conrad Leyser's assessment of Eugenius Vulgaris's "change of sides;' in "Charisma
5 Greg. Tur., Histories 935, pp.455-56: "Waddo ... quaerebatur, a genera eius [se. in the Archive: Roman Monasteries and the Memory of Gregory the Great, c. 870-c. 940;' in
BeretmdisJ equos suos fuisse direptus?' Le Scritture dai monasteri> ed. Flavia De Rubeis and Waiter Pohl (Rome, 2003), p. 220.
6. Nira Pancer, Sans peur et sans ve'ilfogne: De Phonneur et des femmes aux premiers temps 8. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Requiem in D Minor, IC626> New Completion by Robert
merovingiens (Paris, 2001) p. 123.
Levin. Telarc Digital CD-80410, 1995.

194 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Conclusion { 195


things that emotions are expressed. In addition, it would seem that the need
or desire to express emotions might sometimes nudge a genre. In the case of EMOTIONAL DEPENDENCY, EMOTIONAL AGENCY
Herchenefreda, the mother of Desiderius, we see how the letter, so dry in
To the extent that historians have thought about it at all, they have given
her son's hands, could be transformed into a sort of sermon, and thereby two very different explanations for why emotional norms have changed
gracefully contain all sorts of sentiments that ordinary letters of the Neus-
over time.ll The first proposes that emotions respond to outside social, eco-
trian court did not.
nomic, religious, political, and other pressures. The second makes emotions
Closely tied to the issue of genre is that of purpose. Many early medieval themselves the causes of their own transformation.
sources are didactic, meant to teach rather to describe or express. Gregory
State formation is the event that transformed the emotional life of the
the Great sometimes revealed-I use the word cautiously- how he and oth- West for Norbert Elias. The absolutist court created the conditions for emo-
ers felt, but above all he was interested in the theory of"cogitations;' a sub- tional transformations, from coarse, simple, and direct to delicate, complex,
ject that seems at first glance to belong more to the history of ideas about
and oblique. Economic developments aided the process, with the expand-
emotions than to the history of emotions per se. Yet the two cannot be so
ing bourgeois class aping the norms of those above. Confronted by an in-
easily disentangled. Linguists have shown that our folk theories about
creasingly fastidious middle class, the aristocracy responded by valuing still
anger, for example, have much to do with way in which we experience greater refinement. Meanwhile, the various demands made "by bourgeois
9
anger. Peter Steams's work strongly suggests that when emotional stan-
professional and commercial functions" on members of the middle .class
dards change, emotional styles-the way feelings are expressed and, surely, worked in the same direction as the strictures of the court, inhibiting
to some degree, felt-change to follow suit. Belief has much to do with feel- drives.U In this sense the history of emotions depended secondarily on the
ing. If I believe .that my anger should be "let out;' I cultivate it. The Stoics rise of capitalism.
believed that anger was no part of the wise man, and so they encouraged Peter Steams, while agreeing that outside forces cause change, places em-
tranquillity. The valuation of the anger is entirely opposite in these in- phasis on different factors. Industrialization, for him, was the "cause" of the
stances. Thus, while it is impossible to prove that anger is felt variously by a emotional style of the Victorian era, which emphasized loving mothers at
Stoic and a ranter, nevertheless the full experience, with its dismay at or en- home and angry but courageous men in the public sphere: "People began to
joyment of the emotion itself, is certainly different. People train themselves realize that the same industrial world that required the family as emotional
to have feelings that are based on their beliefs. At the same time, feelings haven also required new emotional motivations for competitive work....
help to create, validate, and maintain belief systems.Io
The resultant response explains why Victorianism introduced its most dis-
We may now return to the question: is this book a history of emotions? tinctive emotional emphases in arguing for channeled anger and coura-
The answer is affirmative as long as we recognize the limitations of any such geous encounters with fear.'' 13 And just as industrialization determined Vic-
inquiry, especially regarding the Early Middle Ages. We cannot know how
torian emotional culture, so too a new mix of factors- among them the
all people felt, but we can begin to know how some members of certain as- ideal of"companionate marriage;' the reality of smaller families, and the de-
cendant elites thought they and others felt or, at least, thought they ought velopment of consumerism -led to a repudiation of that culture and an em-
to feel. That is all we can know. But it is quite a lot. How much more do we phasis on muted emotions, the so-called "cool" style.
know about the feelings of the people around us?
Steams's theory thus has emotional standards (his focus) responding to

9. Lakoff, Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things, pp. 380-416, a discussion of the metaphors
n. The ascendency of the Annates school until recendy has meant that there has been
that we use to speak of anger-e.g., "I blew my stack!"-that reflect our conception of the
greater emphasis on structures (which tend to persist) than on change.
feeling, and thus the way that we feel it. While Lakoff thinks the experience of the emotion
r2. Elias, Civilizing Process, p. 426; on the relationship between the courtiers and the "bour-
produces the metaphor, a social constructionist argument would make the metaphor shape
geois strata" in general see pp. 422-27.
the way the emotion is experienced.
13. Peter N. Stearns,American Cool: Constructing a Twentieth-Century Emotional Style (New
IO. On this, see Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling, esp. p. 258.
York, 1994), p. 63.
I96 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages
Conclusion { r 97
external forces. Emotions change because other things change; they are of the Revolution. The eighteenth-century rise of sentimentalism gave the
"caused" by more traditional historical factors. "New economic forms rede- Revolution both its initial impetus and a strong bias toward extremism?' 18
fined functional emotions?' 14 For Steams, emotions rarely cause anything;
rather, they react and adapt. IS EMOTIONAL COMMUNITIES AS AGENTS OF CHANGE
William Reddy, in contrast to both Elias and Steams, seeks "a dynamic, a Steams and Elias must be at least pardy right. If emotions are involved in
vector of alteration" in the nature of emotions themselves. 16 He proposes assessments of weal and woe, then they must respond to social, political,
"emotives" as the engine of change that needs no outside push because, by and economic changes, because those are the d1ings that create the stimuli
definition, emotives are "self-altering?' We have already seen in the intro- that both require and shape judgment and action. Neverd1eless, Reddy is
duction to this book how Reddy traced the processes of emotional transfor- surely correct in asserting that emotions have a dynamic of their own and
mation around the time of the French Revolution. Let me summarize his real historical force. The Neustrian courtiers around Clothar II and Dago-
argument here. The emotives of the pre-Revolutionary court were highly bert competed for favor and power not by fomenting factions (that would
restricted, for emotions were of no interest to the king. At the salons and be a later development) but by drawing together in a tight fraternity dedi-
other "emotional refuges" of the period, however, "sentimentalism" flour- cated to patronage and commendation. The nan1re of their emotional
ished. Celebrating passion as the font of morality, the salon style overcame style-one inspired, I have argued, by Columbanian monasticism-hel~ed
the court style, and the French Revolution was born. But the emotives of determine the ways in which d1e Neustrians responded to the cares, duties,
sentimentalism induced their own constriction and emotional suffering. and goals of kings, courtiers, and bishops. They could have been highly com-
The revolutionaries could not tolerate that goals might change or that pas- petitive, but they were not. Later, however, the elites of Francia saw and ap-
sions might lead people down different paths. A new emotional regime preciated the role of envy. This was not only because they were confronted
emerged to ease the suffering. It relegated feelings to the private sphere, wid1 feuding factions but also because they had their own expectations and
where they could flourish in luxuriant and contradictory abundance, while assumptions about human and demonic behavior, which led them to see
leaving the public sphere to "reason?' envy in such instances. I am arguing that the norms of their emotional com-
The mechanisms that Reddy argues for these two transformations are munity helped fan the flames of factional feuding. There is not one emo-
not precisely parallel. The emotional suffering of the court was ameliorated tional response to events or situations but rather many possible ones .. Emo-
by the "refuges"-so in this case, the change to the new emotional regime of tional communities help determine which responses win out-and which
the French Revolution was the triumph of the salon and the theater. The ones are never tried.
emotional suffering of the Terror was ameliorated by nothing at all-sug- If we sought emotional codes and norms in the aggregate-within the
gesting that the new emotional regime of Romanticism grew out of sheer entire European West, for example-we would see no difference between
desperation. Nevertheless, in both cases emotional styles changed because the emotional world of the Neustrian courtiers and that of the late seventh-
of emotional suffering. Suffering, or rather its relative lack, also explains the century elite, since foremost would be the emotional presuppositions of
resilience of Romanticism.l7
Christianity, which were intrinsic to both. If, to the contrary, we sought
Not only does Reddy's theory largely deny agency to external factors, but emotional norms at the level of the family, we would be even more hard put
it malces such factors depend on emotions themselves: "The power of emo- to get our bearings. It is only when we look at the norms of groups smaller
tives to shape feeling had a decisive impact on the opening and the outcome than universal Christendom and larger than nuclear families that we are able
to see how the general Christian stance was variously interpreted, expressed,
I4. Ibid., p. I93- and, indeed, contested. Contestation means that different emotional corn-
Ij. Ibid., p. 66. But Steams and Steams, Emotionology, p. 82o, suggests that it is possible
that "emotional changes cause other fundamental changes" (emphasis in original). r8. Ibid., p. 258. It is tme that Reddy mentions in passing factors other than sentimentalism
r6. Reddy, ''Against Constructionism;' p. 327.
that led to the Terror (p. 2IO ), and that, in his H-France Review reply to Popkin (p. 3), he re-
r7. On the stability of the new emotional regime, see Reddy, Navigation ofFeeling, chap. 7 grets not "underscor[ing] this point more carefully?'
I98 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Conclusion { I99
munities coexisted. This is easiest to see in the example of Gallic funeral epi- advice books-in the secular sphere. None concerns himself with religion in
taphs, where the bereaved of different cities expressed emotions-if at all- the slightest degree. 20 Is the Middle Ages-that ''Age ofFaith"-still to be
very differently. While at the end of the sixtl1 century the pope at Rome, set apart from the "secular" modern age in emotions history as in all other
Gregory the Great, distrusted most emotions, in Gaul at about the same areas of inquiry? In the light of the role of religion in our own day, this
time Bishop Gregory of Tours and his friend Fortunatus luxuriated in emo- seems a blinkered view. Rather, the example of the Middle Ages suggests
tions of every sort. In place of Reddy's "emotional regime" I suggest we that religious values, ideas, and teachings powerfully influence the expres-
spealc of ascendant emotional communities. When the Neustrian court sion of emotion. Further, the effects go the other way as well: habits of
chastised and reformed by Columbanus, came to the fore, it displaced th~ emotional expression shape the ways in which religion is experienced and
group adhering to Brunhild and Sigibert (patrons of Gregory and Fortuna- understood.
tus) not only politically but also with regard to the production of texts. The With regard to the Early Middle Ages, the first of these statements-that
Neustrians became an ascendant emotional community. religion, in this instance Christianity, helped shape emotional communi-
But it seems reasonable to suppose that the emotional style that had once ties-is probably sufficiently clear from the forgoing chapters. Like the
characterized the Austrasian court of Brunhild continued to be cultivated notes of a scale, the building blocks of Christianity were botl1 varied and fi-
among some aristocratic groups, changing over time, to be sure (just as we nite; and like notes, they could be arranged, drawn upon, omitted, and em-
have seen that epitaphs even in one place changed over time). Other com- phasized in nearly infmite ways. Thus the late seventh-century community
munities, too-with different norms and largely invisible to us-no doubt of Gallic elites embraced teachings about the demons that had originally
persisted even under Neustrian hegemony. One such "subordinate" emo- been embedded in the ascetic program of the Church Fathers, but the goals
tional community, for example, may have existed at Langres; it emphasized of that particular program itself-the extirpation of passions-they nearly
anxiety. More important for the future, some of the groups coexisting under left out. The early seventh-century Neustrian courtiers, potential heirs to
the Neustrians were already cultivating the rancorous, Devil-filled styles of the enormous range of erp.otional vocabulaty of a Gregory of Tours (itself
emotional expression which came to the fore in the late seventh century. based on the legacy of Late Antiquity), privileged a few words, letting the
Fredegar, the chronicler with whom chapter 6 begins, may represent one others lapse.21 Christianity may be said to have informed emotional styles,
such a group. 19 It was only in the last two or three decades of that century, but there was no "one" Christianity. 22
however, that members of such communities gained sufficient influence to This leads to the other side of the coin, that emotional communities in
claim, through their near monopoly on writing, their own interpretation of turn helped shape religious expression. The community of Gregory the
the past. Thus the group in power, by dominating the instruments of com- Great, so ascetic and full of feeling at the same time, expressed its religious
munication, setting the parameters for preferment, and locking out those ideas quite differently from that of its contemporary Gregory of Tours,
who do not share their views, has a mighty influence on the emotional whose Histories have rightly been interpreted as the bishop's attempt to
norms of a period-at least, on the norms that the historian is able to see. "edify the church"-to show the "establishment of the kingdom of God

SECULAR SPHERES / RELIGIOUS SPHERES


Elias, Steams, and Reddy are the most important theorists of the history of 20. In his review of Navigation of Feeling in H-France Review, Jeremy Popkin notes (p. 6):
emotion to date. It is striking that all three situate emotions and their trans- "Reddy's accoun): says nothing about religion, despite its large role in inculcating styles of
formations-whether imposed at court, liberated in refuges, or discussed in emotional management and the powerfi:tl emotions unleashed by anything affecting it?'
21. Manuscripts of Gregmy's works were produced in the seventh century, as a glance at
those collated for the MGH edition of Gregory's Histories shows (e.g., MSS Br and B2,
I9. Marina Mangiameli argues that Fredegar's work reflects the interests of the aristocracy, MGH SRM r/r, p.xxv). However, I am assuming that people who wrote (such as Gregory)
keen to gain new concessions and convinced that these were best guaranteed through the also spoke and trained others to speak; in this way, among others, emotional communities
palace mayors; Mangiameli, "Rileggendo 'Fredegario': Appunti per una analisi del Chroni- that no longer show up in d1e extant sources may have nevertheless perpetuated themselves.
con/' Romanobarbarica 14 (1996-97): 307-57, esp. 342, 348-57. 22. See Brown, Rise ofWestern Christent:Wm.

2oo } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Conclusion { 201


~
I

23
through word and deed?' The Histories were a form of religious expres- Roman" emotions; then come the emotions of the Middle Ages; finally the
sion, but because they recognized such porous borders between the divine emotions of the modern period appear. 24
and worldly, they might be (and have been) taken to concern the world William Reddy and Peter Steams have already made clear the enormous
alone. In effect I am arguing a very basic and general point: that emotional transformations in emotional standards, norms, and styles within the mod-
styles have much to do with modes of religious expression. This has impli- ern period. The present book hopes to do the same for a period of the
cations beyond a general sort of "feel" in religious writings. It means that . anddynamtsm.
Middle Ages that has rarely been known for its vanety . 25 By
new -:ords-~nd their attached ideas-may enter the religious vocabulary looking at emotional communities, we have seen not just that this or that
as the1r emotiOnal valence changes. It was a commonplace in Christianity emotion changed its meaning and valuation but more importantly that
that virtuous women dedicated to God not lose their chastity: consider the whole systems of emotion- integrally related to the traditions, values,
bride oflnjuriosus in Gregory ofTours's account, weeping and sighing on needs, and goals of different groups-could come to the fore or fade away
her wedding night. But in the late seventh century, which privileged ran- within a short span of time. The study of emotional communities alerts us
corous emotions, a saint could become "furious" at a would-be suitor to to transformations at the core of human societies once considered invariable
show her love of God: religious expression here depended on the norms of and offers new ways to think about the perennial historical issues of stasis
a particular emotional community. and change.
To be sure, secular factors are also crucial for emotional communities,
this was true in the Early Middle Ages as well as now. The Austrasian com- 24. I am thinking here above all of Elias, Civilizing Process and works beholden to it, but
munity of which Gregory of Tours was a part had good political reasons to also of such excellent recent smdies as Konstan, Emotions of the Ancient Greeks and Robert A.
stress fraternal love; the Neustrian community of Desiderius needed to Kaster, Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome (Oxford, 2005).
. But see Julia M. H. Smith, Europe after Rome: A New Cultural History soo-Iooo (Oxford,
think a lot about patronage and deference; and the elites of the late seventh 25

2005)
century were obliged to worry about the causes and consequences of in-
ternecine warfare. The point is not to make religion the sole source of cause
and effect but rather to recognize its synergistic role alongside politics, fam-
ily structure, education, and social norms and obligations. Emotional com-
munities did not become ascendant simply because they gained political
power but because their emotional styles suited certain forms of power and
lifestyles at certain times.

STAGNATION AND CHANGE


The term tongue duree was coined by the historian Fernand Braudel to refer
to structures of the landscape, material culture, and attitudes that have
lasted over the long haul. Few notions fit the idea as well as Western emo-
tions, which has been a category of mind- however variously understood-
since the time of Plato.
But this fact should not imply that the history of emotions has changed
with the glacial slowness of the tongue duree. Historians have tended to peri-
odize emotional transformations within the broad eras reminiscent of West-
ern civilization courses: there are "Greek" emotions or even "Greek and

23. Heinzelmann, Gregory ofTours, p. 172.

202 } Emotional Communities in the Early Middle Ages Conclusion { 20 3


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Agerad, bishop, 173-75 avarice words, 42, 46, 8r, 156
Ageric, bishop, I03 avaritia. See avarice words
Agnes, abbess ro7, u8-r9, 121-22, 127-28. Avitus, bishop ofVienne, 73, 75
See also Holy Cross convent Avitus I, bishop ofClermont, ror, 126-27
Alboin, king, 123 Avitus II, bishop ofClermont, 170
Alsace, r88
Althoff, Gerd, 12-13, 175, 178 Balthild, queen, 133, 135, 169, 171, 184. See
amae, 15 also Life ofBalthild; Martyrdom ofLeude-
Amalfrid, II4-I5 gar
Amandus, bishop, 134-35 banality. See topoi
amor. See love words Barontus. See Vision ofBarontus
Andelot, Treaty of, ro8 Baudoaldus, bishop, 122
anger words, 39, 41-42, 44-48, so, 81-83, Baudonivia, ro7, u6, II9, 126, 128-29, 194
149, rsr, 156, 173, 179, r8r, 184, r88, 194, Berny-Riviere, ro3, ro7, uo
196. See also enry words; malice Bertegiselus, abbot, 141
Annates school, 6 biblical exegesis, and emotions, 28
Annegray, 131 Bobbio, 131-32, 134, 140, 145. See also Athala,
anxiety words, 90, 147-48, 152, 187-88, 200 abbot; Columbanus; Waldebert, abbot;
Apollinaris, Sidonius, 6o, 72, 140-41 Wandregisil
Arian heresy, 68, 73 Bobolenus. See Life ofGermanus
Aristotle, 35-37, 195 Bobolenus, abbot, 140
Aries. See Caesarius, bishop Bodegisl, ro6, II3, r2r
Arnold, Magda, 13-14 Bourdieu, Pierre, 25
Arnulf of Metz, 176 Bourges. See Sulpicius, bishop; Vulfoleo-
Aspasia, abbess, 140, 145, 193 dus, bishop
Athala, abbot, 145-46, 149, 153, rs8-6o Bowlby, Jolm, 6
Athanagild, us Braudel, Fernand, 202
Atsma, Harmut, 171 Brioude, ro8
Auden, W. H., u Brw1hild, queen, ro2-8, us, 120, 129, 132-33,
Audoenus. See Dado 144, 149-50, 155-56, 163-64, 200
Augustine, Saint, 41-42, so-sr, 98, rsr, 194 Bruyeres-le-Chil.tel, 173
Austrasia, 62, 69, ro2, 129-30, 165, 169, 200. Burgundy and Burgundians, 73, ro2, 124,
See also Brunhild, queen; Dagobert I, 148, 165, !78

220 } Bibliography
Caesarius, bishop, I28
condescension of emotion: in Gregory the Formnams, Venantius; Gregory ofTours; siojpassiones; perturbatiojperturbationes;
Cahors. See Desiderius Great, 8S-9I terms of endearment pre-emotions; entries for individual emo-
Canace, ns
consolation words, 65, 68, I45, I47-+8, I55 dulcisjdulcissimus. See dulcedo; family feeling; tion words; emotions markers and gestures;
Carentinus, bishop, I23 Cornelius, Randolph, IS love words; terms of endearment texts; vices; and writers
caritas. See love words Council of Paris, I56 Dynamius of Marseille, ro6, 126, I28 emotives, Reddy's theory of, 18-22, 25, 27,
carusjcarissimus. See terms of endearment cupiditas. See desire words 198-99
Cassian, John, 47, I52, I8o, I82-84 Curtius, Ernst, 29 Ebroin, mayor, 165, 171, 183-86 envy words, 42, 45, 48, 72, 81, 123, 125-26,
Cassiodorus, 86
Edict of Paris, 156 175, 182-84
Chamalieres, I70
Dado, I33-34, I37-40, I42, I63. See also Egidius, bishop, ro2-3 epitaphs, 6r, 193, 195, 2oo; models for,
Charibert, king, ro2, ro6, no, I23 Life ofAudoin; Neustrian court and Ekman, Paul: lists of emotions of, 54, 126, 59-61; number of, in Gaul, 57; physical
charters, I46-47, I6I, I7I-74, I95 courtiers !85 appearance of, 57; at Clermont, 6o,
Chartres. See Agerad, bishop
Dagobert I, king, I30, I33-34, I72, I78 Eleutherius, 95-96, 178 68-72; at Trier, 6o, 62-68; at Vienne, 61,
Cheyette, Fredric, n-I2 Dagobert II, king, I70 Elias, Norbert: Civilizing Process, 7-ro, 155, 73-77
Childebert I, king, no, I24
deference and hierarchy, I38-42, I58, I6I-62, 197, 2oo; historians' responses to, 9-13 Ercamberta, 173
Childebert II, king, ro8, I3I I8o Eligius, bishop, 133-34, 137, 140, 143, Eufronius, bishop, ro6-7
Childeric II, king, I8I, I86 Delumeau, Jean, 6 145-46, 154-55. See also Neustrian court eupatheiai, 42
Chilperic, king, ro2-3, no, ISO, I56
demons and Devil, 47, 8I-82, 95, I7I, I74, and courtiers; sermons Eustasius, abbot, 170, 188
Chramlinus, bishop, I73 I79, I82-85, I88, 200 elite, I96. See also pan-Frankish elite Evagrius, 46-47, 182
Chramnesind. See Sichar and Chramnesind
Desert Fathers, 42-43, +6-so, 97, u8, I30, Embrun. See Chramlinus, bishop evil thoughts. See pre-emotions
Chronicle ofFredegar. See Fredegar I44, I56, I82-83. See also Cassian, John; emotional communities: ascendant, 2oo;
Cicero, 38-40, 48-49 Evagrius defined, 2, 23-27, I09, 164-67, 188-89; family feeling: at Trier, 66-68, 99; in Gre-
Civilizing Process. See Elias, Norbert: Civi- Desiderius: career, I34, I56; letters of, overarching and subordinate, 24, 6I-6{ gory the Great, 92-95; in Gregory of
lizing Process
I35-48, I63, I93 See also Life ofDesiderius; 125, 199-200. See also entries for particular Tours and Formnams, n3-22, 180. See also
Clanchy, Michael, I2
Neustrian court and courtiers emotional communities love; friendship
Clams, I85
desire words, 38, I74, I86 emotional refi1ges and regimes, 19-23, fathers and other men, 94, 123, 150
Clermont: city of, 68-72, roo, ro2. See also "Destruction ofThuringia, ThC:' U4-I5. See 125-27, 198-200 fear words, 38, 4I-42, so, 76, 84, 92, 9:7,
Avitus I, bishop ofC!ermont; Avin1s II, also Fornmams, Venantius emotional suffering. See emotional refuges 145-47, 157, r6o, 172-73, 175, 178, 185-86,
bishop of Clermont; Martyrdom ofPrae- Deurechild, I52-53 and regimes 188
jectus
Devil. See demons and Devil emotionology, 6-7, 97, 197-98 feigning emotion. See sincerity
Clothar I, king, ro2, ro6, ni, n4, I24 Dhuoda, 154 emotions: as agents of change, 196-200, Felicity, Saint: Homily on, 92-94, 98
Clothar II, king, I29-30, I32-35, I44, ISO,
Dialogues, 79-80, 86-89. See also Gregory 202-3; ancient words for, 38-40, 47, 191; felix. See happiness words
I56, I63-64
the Great: theory of emotions of automatic and habimal nature of, 18, 27, first movements. See pre-emotions
Clothar III, king, I83, I86
Diamond, Gregory Andrade. See Isen, 29, 82; cognitive and social construction- Fontaines, 131
Clotild, Deo devota, I73 AliceM. ist theories of, I3-15, r8, 155, 179, 191; ges- Fontanelle, I7I. See also Life ofWandregisil
Clotild, queen, ro2, no Dido, bishop, I68 mres and, 12-13, 27, n7; gendering of, 8, Formnatus, Venantius: friendship with Gre-
Clovis I, king, ro2, I24
dilectiojdiligo. See love words; terms of en- 149-55, 161; historical sources and, 26-29, gory ofTours, roo-ro2, ro9; life and
Clovis II, Ring, I30, I33, I46-+7, I69, I72 dearment 193-96; historiography of, 9-13, 17-23, background, roo, ro2-8; Life of
Cologne. See Carentinus, bishop
dilectusjdilectissimus. See love words; terms 196-99; hydraulic theory of, 13, 33; mod- Radegund, 126; poem in praise of virgin-
Columbanus, I30-35, I92, 2oo; emotions in of endearment ern lists of, 53-55; modern words for, 3-5, ity, n8-19; sincerity of 29, roo-101 n. 4,
writings of, I3I, I57-6I. See also J onas: Life Dinzelbacher, Peter, 6 191; political uses of, n-I3, n7, 122-23, 122; See also "The Destruction of
ofColumbanus Disticha Catonis, 8 175-79; religious sensibilities and, 127-28, Thuringia"; dulcedo; Gregory ofTours;
commendation, I4I-42
Dbwn, Thomas, 3, 194 200-202; Stoic d1eory of, 37-42, 55, 196; letters and letter collections
compassion: in Gregory the Great, 86-89 dolor. See grief words; sadness words vices and, 39, 46-49, 81-91, 156, 182-83. Foucault, Michel, 25
compunction: in Gregory the Great, 86.::_89
dulcedo, 29, 66, ro6-7, no-n3, 195. See also See also affictus; motusjmotus animi; pas- Franci, 167-68
222} Index Index { 223
Fredegar, 163-64, 178 196, 200. See also Dialogues; letters and Ingund, daughter ofBmnhild, II5 Leclercq, Jean, ro
Fredegund, queen, !03, II7, 129, 150 letter collections; Moralia in Job Ingund, queen of Clothar I, m Urins, r48
French Revolution, 19-21, 198-99 grief words, 42, 44, 65-66, 75, 89, n6-r7, Injuriosus, nr, n9-20, 202 letters and letter collections, 28, 90-92,
Freud, Sigmund, 7 155, 177-78, 184. See also tears; emotions: inscriptions, funerary. See epitaphs 135-36, 140-41, r96. See also Desiderius:
friendship, n, II3-I4, 122, 136, 143-44. See gestures and; sadness words invidia. See envy words letters of
also Fortunatus, Venantius; Gregory of Grima, Benedicte, 22 ira. See anger words Leudeberta, I46
Tours; letters and letter collections; love Grimoald, mayor, 139, 144, r69 Irish monasticism, 130-31. See also Colum- Leudegar, 169-71. See also Martyrdom of
words groans and sighs, 44, 49, 75, 90, I77 See also banus Leudegar
Friesen, Wallace. See Ekman, Paul emotions: political uses of; grief words; Isen, Alice M., r8, 21, 27, 29 Levin, Robert, 195
Fulgentius ofRuspe, 151 sadness words Itta, wife of Pippin I, 169 libido, 38, 41-42
juror, r85-86, 202. See also anger words Guntram, king, ro2, 123, 131, 156 Lift ofAudoin, 167, 175-78
Jaeger, C. Stephen, ro-n, II4 Lift ofBalthild, 167-68, 178, r8o, r85, r87. See
Galen, 41, 49 Habermas, Jiirgen, 19 n. 75 James-Lange themy, 27 also Balthild, queen
Gallomagnus, bishop, ro6 hagiography: constraints of genre of, 151-52, jealousy. See envy words Lift ofColumbanus. See Jonas: Lift ofColum-
Gallus, uncle of Gregmy of Tours, 70 n. 52, 195; defined, 25; and emotions, 28 Jerome, Saint, 43-46, 150 banus
n6 Hanawalt, Barbara, 9 John ofReome. See Jonas: Lift of]ohn of Lift ofDesiderius, 137, 154. See also Desiderius
gastrimawia. See gluttony Handley, Mark A., 63,67 Rio me Lift ofFulgentius ofRuspe, 151
gaudium. See joy words happiness words, 38, 44, 50, 64, 71, 95-96, Jolliffe, J. E. A., n Lift ofGermanus, r68-69, 176
gemitus. See groans and sighs 157, 159-60. See also joy words Jonas: life, 134-35, 156; Lift ofColumbanus, Lift ofGertrude, r69, 185-86, 194
gender. See fathers and other men; mothers Harn~, Rom, 53 131-32, 140, 144, !46, 149, 152-53, 157, 163, Lift ofJohn ofRiomlf. See Jonas: Lift ofJohn
and other women hate words, 41-42, 45, 123-25, 163-64 r88; Lift of]ohn ofRiome, 148, 151, r85, ofRiome
Genesius, bishop, r8r hedone. See happiness words r88-89. See also Neustrian court and Lift ofPachomius, 152
genre: constraints of, 27-29, 195-96. See also Heliodorus, 150 courtiers Lift ofSadalbewa, 170, 179, r87-89
emotions: historical sources and; topoi; Herchenefreda, 154-55, 164, r96 Jouarre, 133 Lift ofSimeon Stylites, 151
entries for individualgenres Hermenar, bishop, 170 joy words, 44, 64-65, 68, 75, 77, 95, II7, 137, Life ofWandregisil, 170-71, 176, 178, r84
Germanus, abbot. See Lift ofGermanus Heroides, n4 153, r6r, 175-78. See also happiness words; Limoges. See Ruricius, bishop
Gertrude. See Lift ofGertrude hierarchy. See deference and hierarchy tears Longoret, monastety of Saint Peter at, r68
gestures. See emotions: and gestures Hochschild, Arlie, 23-24 Julian, Saint, ro8 tongue duree, 202
gluttony, 35, 46-48, 8r Holy Cross convent, !02, ro6-7, n6-I7, Justin II, emperor, II4 Louis XIV; court of, 21-22
Gogo, ro6, 121-22 !27-28 Justus, monk, 89-90 love words, 41, 45, 64-65, 76-77, 83, 85,
Grandval, r68-69. See also Lift ofGermanus Homer, 32-33 90-91, 93-95, II3-23, 125, 137-39, 142-47,
greed. See avarice words Homilies on the Book ofEzechiel, 79 kissing, 44 151, 157-59, 175, 194. See also family feeling;
Gregory ofTours: and Clermont, roo; and Homilies on the Gospel, 79. See also Felicity, Kmsch, Bruno, 170, r88 fathers and other men; friendship; moth-
cult of saints Julian and Martin, ro8-9; Saint: Homily on ers and other women
emotional sensibility of, 28, n9-20, Huizinga, Johan, 5-6, 8, 175; historians' re- Lactantius, 42, 46 luctus. See grief words
!24-25, !27-29, !32, 153, 192, 194-95, sponses to, 9-13 laetitia. See happiness words; joy words Lupus, ro6, no, 121, 123
200-202; episcopal appointment of, ro2; Hummer, Hans, 170, r88 Lagny, 132 lust, 48, 8r
irony in, no-n, 125, 195; and Vienne, Hyams, Paul, 12 Landeric, bishop, 146, 172-73 Luxeuil, 131-32, 140, 144, 169, 176, r86,
69-70; use of dulcedo, no-r3. See also For- hydraulic theory. See emotions: hydraulic Langres, 148, 170, r89, 200. See also Jonas: r88-89. See also Athala, abbot; Colum-
tunatus, Venantius theory of Lift of]ohn ofRiome; Lift ofSadalbewa banus; Eustasius, abbot
Gregory the Great: community of, 8r, 129, Laon, 170 luxuria. See lust
158, 2or; life and works, 79-So; seven Illidius, Saint, 112, n6 laughter and s?liles, 44, 76, 95, 148, 159. See
deadly sins in, 48, 8r; theory of emodons imitatio Christi, 22 also happiness words; joy words Maastricht. See Amandus, bishop
of, 8r-9r, n6, 127-28, 149, r8o, r83, 192, immunities, 131 Lazams,Richard,r4 maeror. See grief words

224} Index Index { 225


Quadragesimus, S7 sighs. See groans and sighs
malice, 174-, rS3. See also anger words Notre-Dame de Bourgmoyen, 173
Noyen. See Eligius, bishop Quintianus, bishop, 124- Sigibert I, king, ro2-7, r2o, 129, r3r, rss-s6,
Mandler, George, I4-
200
Marcatrude, queen, 123 Nussbaum, Martha C., 3, r6-r7, 191
Radegund, ro6-7, II4-, n6-r7, II9. See also Sigibert III, king, 130-34-, 139, 14-7-4-S, r69
Marchiennes, 135
Baudonivia; "The Destruction of Sigismund, king, I24-
Martin, cantor, rS2 Oatley, Keitl1, 14-, 55
Thuringia"; Fortunatus, Venantius: Life Simeon Stylites, rsr
Martin, Saint, ro2, roS-9, n6, r26 odium. See hate words
ofRadegund; Holy Cross convent sincerity, 19, 26, 2S-29, 122, 172, rS6, 193
Martyrdom ofLeudegar, r6S-7o, 174--75, Ouen, Saint. See Dado
Rado, 133. See also Neustrian court and sins. See emotions: vices and
17S-Sr, rS3-S7 Ovid, II4-
courtiers Smail, Daniel Lord, 12
Martyrdom ofPraejectus, r66, 17S, rSr-S2
"Radolium:' 133 smiles. See laughter and smiles
Maurice, emperor, ns Pachomius, Saint, 152
Rauracius, bishop, 14-2 Smith, Craig, I4-
Medard, bishop, II4- pain: See grief words; sadness words
Rebais, 132-33 Soissons. See Medard, bishop
Medoaldus, bishop, 139, 14-S Palatina, ro6
Reddy, William M., r6-23, 120, 126, so/amen. See consolation words
melancholy. See sadness words Pancer, Nira, I94-
I9S-200, 203 Solignac, 132-33
Meobecq, monastery at, r6S pan-Frankish elite, 165-67, rS9, 193,
ReimsjMetz court, ro2, ro7, n3, r2S, 155, Stablo-Malmedy, 132
Merovech, son ofTheuderic II, I64- 200-202. See also entries for the writings of
r65. See also Austrasia; Brunhild, queen; Steams, Carol, 7, 97
metaphors, 193, I96 n. 9 members of this elite
Fortunatus, Venantius; Gregory ofTours; Steams, Peter, 7, 97, 196-9S, 200, 202
metus. See fear words pan-Gallic elite. See pan-Frankish elite
Sigibert I, king Stoics. See emotions: Stoic tl1eory of
Metz. See Reims/Metz court; Vilicus, Paris. See Charibert, king; Council of Paris;
Remiremont, r69 Strongman, KenT., 53
bishop Landeric, bishop
risus. See laughter and smiles Sullivan, Shirley Darcus, 33
Miller, William Ian, 12 passiojpassiones: as martyrdom accounts, r66;
Rodez. See Quintianus, bishop Sulpicius, bishop, 134-, 137-4-0
Moore, John C., ro as word for "emotion:' 4-7, ss, rS2, 191
Romainm6tier, I7I superbia. See pride
Moralia in job, 79, Sr-Ss. See also Gregory Pastoral Rule, 79
Rosaldo, Renato, 22, 24- sweetness. See dulcedo
the Great: theoty of emotions of pathosjpathe, 33-39, 4-7, r9r
Rouen. See Dado Syagrius, brotl1er ofDesiderius, I3S
mothers and other women, 93-94-, 9S, n2, Patroclus, n2
Paul, Saint, S6 Rule of St. Benedict, rS3
124-, 14-9-55, r6o-6r, 192. See also family
Ruricius, bishop, 136, I4-I tears, 4-3, 4-5, 4-9-50, 65, 75, 77, S4-, ss, 96,
feeling Paulus, bishop, 137-4-0, I4-4-
Rusticus, brotl1er ofDesiderius, 13S, 155 n6, r2S, 14-4--4-5, 152-53, r6o
motusjmotus animi, s, so, 191 pavor. See fear words
terms of endearment: in St. Augustine,
mourning. See grief words perturbatiojperturbationes, 3S, 4-0, S3
Sadalberga. See Life ofSadalberga 51; in charters, 173; in Columbanus's
Mozart, Amadeus, I95 Peter, Saint, 14-6, 179
sadness words, 4-3, 4-7-4-S, so, 65, 71, 77, Sr, writings, rsS; in Desiderius's letter
Mummola, abbess, 173 Pippin I, 14-4-, r69
S4-, S9-91, 93, 97, n9-20, 176-7S. See also collection, 14-4-; in Herchenefreda's
Pippin II, 165
grief words letters, 154--55; at Trier, 64-, 66-6S, n3;
Nant, 132 planctus. See grief words
Saint Amantius monastery, I4-4- at Vienne, 76. See also dulcedo; fan1ily
Nanthild, queen, 137 Plato, 33-35
Saint-Amarin, 170 feeling
Neustria, ro2, 130, r6s. See also Ebroin, pleasure. See happiness words
Saint-Denis, 14-6-4-7, 172-73 texmal communities, 25
mayor; Franci; Neustrian court and Plutchik, Robert, 54--55
Saint-Symphorien, Autun, 170 Theoctista, Byzantine princess, 91, 95, 9S
courtiers Poitiers, 170, See also Dido, bishop; Holy
Sallustius, bishop, 139, 14-3-4-4- Theudebert, king, I24-
Neustrian court and courtiers: 130, 132-35, Cross convent
salutations. See letters and letter collections Theuderic I, king, 69
137, 14-3, rsr, rss, r57-5S, r6r-62, rSo, rSs, Praejectus, bishop. See Martyrdom ofPrae-
satire. See Gregory ofTours: irony in Theuderic II, king, 131-32, 14-4-, r64-
192, 199-200, 202. See also entries for indi- jectus
Seneca, 39, 4-I Theuderic III, king, 170, 173, rS6
vidual members of the court pre-emotions, 39, 4-I, 4-6-4-7, so, S2, Ss, 96,
sermons: and emotions 2S, 14-5, 154--55 thumos, 32-33, 35
Nevers. See Rauracius, bishop IS2
Shaver, Philip, 54--55 timor. See fear words
Nicetius, bishop of Lyon, ro6, 121 pride, 4-6-4-S, Sr
Sichar and Chramnesind, m, 124--25 topoi, 27-30, 6r, I93 See also emotions:
Nicetius, bishop ofTrier, 69, I03 Psalter, rs6
Sigeric, son of Sigismund, I24- historical sources and; sincerity
Nivelles, 169. See also Life ofGertrude psuche, 33-34-
Index { 227
226} Index
Tours, 102-3. See also Eufronius, bishop; Vision ofBarontus, 168, 176, 179, 181, 184-
Gregory ofTours voluntas, 39, so
Trier, 62-68, 99, 102, II3 Volvic, 170
tristitia. See sadness words Vulfoleodus, bishop, r68
Tusculan Disputations. See Cicero Vulgate bible: emotion words in, 4-3-4-6

Venantius,patricius Italiae, 90-92 Wademir, 173


Verdun. See Ageric, bishop; Paulus, bishop Waldebert, abbot, 14-0, 189
Vetus Latina, 4-3 Wandregisil, 170-71. See also Life ofWan-
Vezin, Jean, 171 dregisil
vices. See emotions: vices and; pre-emo- weeping. See tears
tions; entries for individual vices White, Stephen D., 12, 178
Vienne, 72-78, 98-99 will. See voluntas
Vilicus, bishop, 103 women. See mothers and other women
vir Dei, 86-89, u6 Wood, lan, 103
virtues, 4-9, 160
Visigoths: in southern Gaul, 68 zelus. See envy words

228} Index

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